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DOS: What it is, where it is, and what it does. Copyright � 2000 by Dr. Hank Levinson Please note: This article is for 100% FREE distribution only! Feb 21, 2000 Each digital computer runs a fundamental program which calls other user programs as directed by the user. This fundamental program is kept in a silicon chip called a "Read Only Memory" (ROM) and is loaded into the computer's main memory (RAM) at startup, and set running (executing). This fundamental program is the computer's "Operating System (OS). It allows other programs and data to be stored in RAM and also facilitates the execution of these other programs. In order not to have to enter a program by hand from a keyboard each time we wish to RUN it, we use external (to the computer) devices to store the program either on magnetic tape or on magnetic disks. Thus a slightly different OS is needed, a "Disk Operating System", DOS. Such a system includes commands new to OS such as CATALOG, LOAD, SAVE, DELETE, and INIT. In order to "READ" information from a disk, the computer must be told something about what to expect: how many "tracks" (concentric rings of magnetized strips) to find, and into how many "sectors" (sections) each track is divided. This information is different for each main kind of DOS. It is kept in a ROM chip usually on the "controller card" which interfaces the disk drive to the computer. Apple DOS was the first disk operating system released to the public. Several different versions were released. In chronological order (from "Beneath Apple DOS", by Don Worth and Pieter Lechner (C) 1981 by Quality Software), these were: DOS 3 June 29. 1978 DOS 3.1 July 20, 1978 DOS 3.2 Feb. 16, 1979 DOS 3.2.1 July 31, 1979 DOS 3.2.1 Plus July 21, 1979 DOS 3.3 Aug. 25, 1980 DOS 3.3 Jan. 01, 1983 ProDOS versions ......................... All versions of DOS prior to DOS 3.3 used 13 sectors. DOS 3.3 and all subsequent versions of Apple DOS used 16 sectors per track. DOS occupied the first two tracks on a disk, numbered 0 and 1. In order for machines operating under the new 16 sector DOS to read a 13 sector older disk, the 16 sector version of DOS had to be modified to read 13 sectors. In the beginning, Apple had a strict policy of "backwards compatibility" This is to say any newer system had to be compatible insofar as was possible with previous older systems.) This was accomplished for DOS by two methods: "soft" and "hard". A "PreBoot" disk was issued which modified the copy of 16-sector DOS in RAM to 13-sector DOS (and then one would boot a 13-sector disk normally). Otherwise one could use an "old" disk controller card having the original 13-sector ROM's. Some controller cards (like those made for the Franklin clone of the Apple) had ROM's containing both versions, 16 and 13 sector DOS. The user would switch between the two by using a toggle switch or resetting a jumper on the card. There was a "daughter-card" also available which had both ROM's and plugged into a standard Apple disk controller card, allowing choice of 13 or 16 sector DOS via a toggle switch. Finally, there was a third-party modification of DOS 3.3 called "DOUBLE DOS" which allowed one to switch between the two versions via a simple keyboard command ("&"). (There were many third-party modifications of DOS. My favorite is UniDOS by MicroSparc, of Nibble Magazine fame. This allowed DOS 3.3 to be extended to 3.5" disks and also relocated the image of DOS in RAM normally located at addresses beginning with $8000) to an address above $9000 (in hex) thus freeing more RAM above $8000, for program use. One may ask why one should bother with older versions of Apple DOS? Much early software was written for 13-sector DOS. I have had voice recognition cards (for Apple ][ and ][+) whose software "didn't work"! It worked perfectly treated as 13-sector disks. The same occurred with software for a math coprocessor card called the "APU" (Arithmetic Processor Unit), and a whole host of MECC disks (Michigan Educational Consortium Committee). The software as well as most unprotected 13-sector software, can be easily converted to 16-sector software via a program provided by Apple on its DOS 3.3 Master Diskettes named "Muffin". So next time you try to boot an unknown disk, and your disk drive makes strange noises or just sits and spins, consider the possibility it contains some old DOS, and you may have a valuable antique in your possession.