CP/M: Difference between revisions
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CP/M is an operating system developed by Digital Research, Inc., originally released in 1974. | |||
The [[ZX Spectrum +3]] included CP/M support in ROM. The version included is CP/M Plus, which provides compatibility for programs written for the older CP/M 2.2, matching that provided by the [[:wikipedia:Amstrad CPC|Amstrad CPC]]. | |||
CP/M 2.2 compatibility was available for the [[SAM Coupé]] using [[Pro-Dos]]. This did not license the original CP/M code, but was a reimplementation of the interfaces provided by CP/M. | |||
CP/M was used by [[Sinclair Research]] for the development of the [[ZX Spectrum 128]], in the form of a Z80 expansion card [https://www.zdnet.com/article/the-zx-spectrum-birthday-memories/] capable of supporting two instances of CP/M, attached to the corporate VAX-11/780. If two instances were in use, a CP/M system could be emulated using the VAX's own CPU, but used a great deal of processing power, which was discouraged, as by the mid-1980s, the same VAX was used heavily within [[Sinclair Research]] as their corporate computing environment, including email. The Microsoft M80 macro-assembler and L80 linker were used to assemble and link the ZX Spectrum 128's ROM image. | |||
== External link == | |||
* [[:wikipedia:CP/M|CP/M article on Wikipedia]] | |||
[[category:software]] | [[category:software]] | ||
[[category:Native Software]] | [[category:Native Software]] |
Latest revision as of 13:59, 10 May 2020
CP/M is an operating system developed by Digital Research, Inc., originally released in 1974.
The ZX Spectrum +3 included CP/M support in ROM. The version included is CP/M Plus, which provides compatibility for programs written for the older CP/M 2.2, matching that provided by the Amstrad CPC.
CP/M 2.2 compatibility was available for the SAM Coupé using Pro-Dos. This did not license the original CP/M code, but was a reimplementation of the interfaces provided by CP/M.
CP/M was used by Sinclair Research for the development of the ZX Spectrum 128, in the form of a Z80 expansion card [1] capable of supporting two instances of CP/M, attached to the corporate VAX-11/780. If two instances were in use, a CP/M system could be emulated using the VAX's own CPU, but used a great deal of processing power, which was discouraged, as by the mid-1980s, the same VAX was used heavily within Sinclair Research as their corporate computing environment, including email. The Microsoft M80 macro-assembler and L80 linker were used to assemble and link the ZX Spectrum 128's ROM image.