The author now has an updated version of A Short History of OS/2. This version is circa 1997, and the updated version has much nicer formatting. This page remains because it has been a popular place to link to from various OS/2 articles.
In the Beginning DOS - 1981
In 1981 when the original IBM Personal Computer was announced, IBM
released three operating systems for it. How many of you remember that? Since I
wrote the first IBM course on how to fix this original PC, I had to know at
least a little about all three of them.
IBM decided early in the development process of the PC that they
did not want to hire a bunch of programmers to write software for it -
especially an operating system. IBM wanted the hardware business and did not
care about the software. Since there was no clear-cut contender for an operating
system at the time, IBM approached three organizations about writing one for the
PC.
IBM first approached Digital Research and asked them to create a
version of CP/M (Control Program/Microcomputer). The owner of DR snubbed the IBM
lawyers and went flying or golfing (depending upon whose story you hear)
instead.
IBM then turned to Microsoft. Bill Gates was very receptive to the
IBM overture and also had information about an operating system which had
already been written that would fill IBM's need very nicely. Gates said yes to
IBM, bought the operating system called DOS for $20,000 and modified it somewhat
to run on the IBM PC.
For you trivia buffs, the other OS delivered with the original PC
was the UCSD P-System (University of California at San Diego Pseudo code
System). I will permit those who make a living from documenting the history of
computers to describe that operating system elsewhere.
Incorrect Assumptions
I suppose we all know what assumptions can do for us. IBM made
some interesting assumptions about the original PC in 1981; or rather, Don
Estridge and his very autonomous development team did.
I was in a meeting with Estridge and a number of other people in
April of 1981, when I first was assigned to write the IBM education for the PC.
It was stated at this meeting that IBM expected to sell about 275,000 Personal
Computers - over a five year product life. in fact, IBM sold almost that many on
August 11, the day before the official announcement. IBM held a preannouncement
showing of the PC in Toronto at the annual ComputerLand Dealers of North America
conference. ComputerLand dealers placed orders for nearly 250,000 computers that
day. On August 12, IBM took orders for almost 250,000 more Personal Computers.
IBM's planners have not been correct since.
At the same meeting the target environment for the PC was
described. Here are some of the assumptions made then.
Small business would buy most PCs.
Large business would stick
with mainframes and dumb terminals.
A few departments in large businesses
would use PCs for local, non-connected work.
The PC would be used for one
task only. Not just one task at a time, but a single task all day long. This
might be a spreadsheet, or word processing, or accounting, but no more than one
task would be performed all day.
Based on these assumptions, the operating system was specified to
be single tasking. Besides, although the hardware was far more powerful than
anything else available in the microcomputer market at the time, it just was not
powerful enough to warrant the extra load that multitasking would place on
it.
As we all know, DOS became the OS of choice for the Personal
Computer. In part, this was due to its significantly lower price when compared
to the other operating system choices then available for the PC.
The Problem
As soon as I bought my original PC ($5,000 for Intel 8088, 4.77
MHz, 96 KB RAM, monochrome display adapter and display, 80 CPS dot matrix
printer) I ran into The Problem.
I was writing a letter in EasyWriter and needed to make a
calculation so I could use the result in the letter. Why should I get out a $10
calculator when I have a $5000 one sitting here? Of course in order to use it as
a calculator, I have to save my document, close EasyWriter, reboot to another
diskette with the calculator program on it (which I wrote myself in BASIC), do
the calculation, write down the answer, reboot to the diskette with EasyWriter,
load the document, and type in the figure from the paper.
We needed multitasking already.
A couple smart companies like Borland came out with Terminate and
Stay Resident (TSR) programs like Sidekick which allowed you to switch to them
by pressing a special key combination. Sidekick had the calculator as well as a
calendar, notepad, schedule, and other little utilities which we all needed.
The TSR became a circumvention for the lack of intrinsic
multitasking in DOS and the PC.
The PC AT - 1984
In 1984, IBM introduced the PC-AT which was the first (IBM) PC to
use the new Intel 80286 processor. The 80286 was designed by Intel with support
for multitasking built into it. IBM made a promise to its customers that they
would provide a multitasking operating system for the PC-AT. IBM keeps its
promises, unlike Microsoft.
The PC-AT was supposed to be able to do multitasking, and some IBM
publicity photos even showed it connected to two dumb terminals. IBM had
contracted Microsoft to create the first multitasking OS for the PC, but Bill
Gates really did not want to do this for the 80286 processor. He publicly called
the 80286 "brain dead" and constantly attempted to turn IBM away from creating
OS/2 for the 80286 and to jump instead to the 80386 which was then under
development at Intel.
Most people don't know this, even many IBMers who should, but IBM
has a series of internal documents called Corporate Directives. Corporate
Directive number 2, signed by Thomas J. Watson Jr. in 1956, states that when IBM
makes a promise to its customers it will keep that promise "...regardless of the
cost." It was on this basis that IBM pressured Microsoft to continue work on
OS/2 1.00.
At this time, the IBM PC was the responsibility of Entry Systems
Division (ESD). ESD was also working closely with Microsoft to produce OS/2.
During this time, Microsoft was also working on the first versions of Windows,
and IBM was working on a product called TopView which was a DOS add-on that
allowed text mode multitasking. Most people do not remember TopView, but it was
a good product and I used it between 1984 and 1987 when OS/2 1.00 was
released.
OS/2 1.00 - 1987
Released in December, 1987, OS/2 1.00 was the first ever operating
system for the Personal Computer to provide intrinsic multitasking based on
hardware support. It was text mode only and allowed only one program to be on
the screen at a time, even though other programs could be running in the
background. It also allowed one very limited session in which DOS programs could
be run. The maximum disk size supported was 32 MB.
Note: All 1.x versions of OS/2 were designed specifically to run
on 80286 systems, but they were capable of running on 80386 systems as well.
OS/2 1.10 SE - 1988
In October, 1988, IBM released OS/2 1.10 Standard Edition (SE). SE
1.10 added a graphical user interface (GUI) to OS/2. This GUI, called
Presentation Manager (PM), allowed users to interact with the operating system
in a more friendly manner than the command line interface provided.
Unfortunately the PM required a very large learning curve on the
part of programmers. When programmers became proficient they found that PM, and
the rest of the OS/2 APIs (Application Programming Interfaces), were very
powerful and quite efficient.
Support for large FAT hard drives was included in this version. By
dividing large physical drives into multiple logical hard drives, up to 2 GB
drives could be supported.
OS/2 1.10 EE - 1989
When IBM announced OS/2 1.10 SE, they also announced OS/2 1.20 EE
(Extended Edition). This product, released in early 1989 included Database
Manager and Communications Manager.
Database Manager was (and is) a multitasking relational database
with a great deal of power.
Communications Manager provided IBM mainframe and midrange
customers with multiple 3270 and 5250 emulation sessions. It also contained a
really bad asynchronous communications program.
OS/2 1.20 - 1989
Released in November 1989, OS/2 1.20 (SE and EE) offered an
improved Presentation Manager. Available with OS/2 1.2 EE for the first time was
the High Performance File System (HPFS). HPFS is much more efficient and faster
than FAT. HPFS also offers much greater data integrity.
REXX also appeared for the first time in OS/2 1.20 Extended
Edition. REXX is a very powerful interpretive programming language which can be
used for writing a complete application or as an extended batch language. I use
REXX quite frequently to write everything from quick and dirty programs to do
something one time, to very large, sophisticated programs which I use
constantly.
Work had also begun on two new OS/2 products. Work on OS/2 2.0 was
well underway. This product would be the first true 32 bit operating system for
personal computers. Designed to work on the Intel 80386 and its follow on
processors which were still in development, OS/2 2.00 would no longer be
compatible with the 80286 processor.
OS/2 3.0 was in the very early stages of development and was
intended at the time to be a network server version of the operating system. It
was also intended to be platform independent. Because the operating system would
be built on top of a microkernel, it would not need to be aware of the type of
hardware on which it was running and therefore could run on Intel processors as
well as Motorola, SUN, and DEC, chips with only a change of the microkernel
hardware abstraction layer.
1990 - The Schism
In 1990, IBM and Microsoft were still working together on the
development of OS/2. Microsoft, however, had found that Windows 3.0 - released
in May 1990 - generated more revenue for them and therefore allotted
increasingly more resource to Windows and correspondingly less to OS/2.
By late 1990, Microsoft had intensified its disagreements with IBM
to the point where IBM decided that it would have to take some overt action to
ensure that OS/2 development continued at a reasonable pace. IBM, therefore,
took over complete development responsibility for OS/2 1.x, even though it was
in its dying days, and OS/2 2.00. Microsoft would continue development on
Windows and OS/2 3.00. Shortly after this split, Microsoft renamed OS/2 V3 to
Windows NT.
OS/2 1.30 - 1991
OS/2 1.30 (SE and EE) was the first version which was written
entirely by IBM. There was still some Microsoft code in it - that would not go
away for a couple years yet - but all of the new code and a good portion of the
existing code for OS/2 1.30 was written by IBM. As a result, OS/2 1.30 was
smaller and faster than previous versions, more stable, and there were far more
device drivers available, though still not nearly enough.
It has never ceased to amaze me that Microsoft could write code
for Windows which was (relative to OS/2 1.1 and 1.2) easy to use and for which
there were plenty of device drivers. Take the process required to install and
configure a printer. Under Windows it was a simple two step process. Under OS/2
1.2 it required the user to perform unnatural acts:
Install the device drivers.
Set up a printer queue.
Create a
printer object.
Associate the device driver with the printer
object.
Associate the print queue with the printer object.
Set up the COM
port configuration for a serial printer.
Use the SPOOL command to redirect
printer output to the desired port.
Specify optional printer settings.
No wonder people thought OS/2 was difficult! In my opinion,
Microsoft was intentionally making OS/2 as difficult to use as possible - or the
programmers they had assigned to write OS/2 were the stupid ones. I still have a
copy of the three page article I wrote for what was then OS/2 and Windows
Magazine (it later became Windows magazine and never had any relationship to the
late, lamented OS/2 Magazine) describing in detail the steps required to install
and configure a printer under OS/2 1.20.
With IBM writing OS/2 1.30, the printer installation became much
easier, as did much of the installation and configuration. IBM completely
rewrote the Print Manager in order to achieve this. It was not great yet, but it
was incomparably better than it had been.
OS/2 1.30 added some other important new or improved features.
REXX was added to the SE version. It had previously only been
available with EE.
Adobe Type I type fonts. (It was shortly after this that
Microsoft began development of TrueType fonts. Interesting!)
New, more easily
readable fonts for the command prompt sessions.
Lazy Write was added to the
HPFS file system.
The swapping algorithm was improved considerably to enhance
performance.
Video device drivers were enhanced to include high resolutions
up to 1024x768.
OS/2 2.00 - 1992
OS/2 2.00 was released in the spring of 1992. The first true 32
bit operating system for personal computers (and for years the only one), it met
IBM's stated goal of being a better DOS than DOS and a better Windows than
Windows. It did this through the use of Virtual DOS Machines (VDMs) which
allowed OS/2 to run many DOS (and Windows) programs at the same time as though
they were on completely separate computers. As far as the DOS programs were
concerned, they actually were in separate computers. Windows programs run on
IBM's licensed version of Windows 3.1 called Win-OS/2.
Because of this separation of DOS programs from each other, one
Windows (remember - Windows is a DOS program) program which crashes can not
crash any other Windows program. By placing Windows programs which do not play
well together in Windows sessions in different VDMs, they can both run without
interfering with each other. In addition the programs can still communicate
through Dynamic Data Exchange and the clipboard.
The Workplace Shell (WPS) was also introduced in OS/2 2.00. The
Workplace Shell is an object oriented user interface (OOUI). The IBM WPS takes
the GUI to the next generation by integrating it much more fully with the rest
of the operating system, including the file system.
OS/2 2.10 - 1993
In May of 1993, IBM released OS/2 2.10. This version sported a
new, faster, fully 32 bit graphics subsystem, TrueType fonts for Win-OS/2
sessions, and Multimedia Presentation Manager (MMPM/2) which provided sound and
video multimedia capabilities.
PCMCIA support for laptop computers also made its debut with OS/2
2.10, along with Advanced Power Management (APM). OS/2 could work with laptop
computers with an APM BIOS to reduce power consumption and extend battery life.
PCMCIA support was crude and supported only a very few computers and PCMCIA
credit card adapters.
To reduce the price of OS/2 for users who already had Windows on
their computers, IBM released OS/2 2.11 for Windows in late 1993. This version
of OS/2 did not have Win-OS/2 and, instead, relied upon the copy of Windows 3.1
already installed on the computer to allow OS/2 to run Windows programs. It did
this by making some minor modifications to the Windows SYSTEM.INI and WIN.INI
files, and hooking the Windows 3.1 code once it was loaded into memory so that
OS/2 could control the Windows 3.1 code in the VDM.
OS/2 Warp - 1994
OS/2 Warp Version 3 made its debut in October 1994 as OS/2 Warp
for Windows. Like OS/2 2.11 for Windows, it did not contain IBM's Win-OS/2 code
and relied on Windows 3.1 to run Windows programs. OS/2 Warp 3 with full
Win-OS/2 support became available a short time later.
Warp 3 was designed to install and run on a computer with only 4MB
of RAM and it did. Performance was tolerable, but adding more RAM improved
performance considerably. Additional device drivers made Warp 3 capable of
running with the vast majority of personal computers and peripherals on the
market. The Workplace Shell was improved significantly in terms of both its
functionality and performance. Print performance, PCMCIA support, and multimedia
support were all enhanced significantly.
TCP/IP and Internet communications were also added to Warp 3. The
Internet Access Kit (IAK) provided a complete package to enable Warp users to
log on and surf the net. The Web Explorer allowed users access to the World Wide
Web, although it was neither as feature rich nor as flexible as the industry
leader, NetScape. Text mode and graphical FTP applications allowed file
transfer. Ultimail Lite gave users e-mail, but Ultimail is cumbersome, slow, and
very difficult to configure.
Unlike previous versions of OS/2, Warp shipped with a BonusPak
CD-ROM which contained several OS/2 applications. IBM Works is a set of
integrated applications including a spreadsheet, word processor, database,
report generator, and charting program.
Warp Connect
Released in 1995, Warp Connect combines all of the features of
Warp 3 with network connectivity and tools. Warp Connect Peer functions allow
client workstations to share resources such as files, printers, and modems with
other users on a network. LAN Server 4.0 and Netware requesters allow access to
the most popular network server environments.
Warp Server
In early 1996 IBM released Warp Server. This landmark product
combines the power and functionality of Warp 3 with the network server
capabilities of IBM's LAN Server 4.0 product. With some relatively minor fixes
to the LAN Server product, and the addition of many previously separate
products, Warp Server is the leading server environment.
Warp Server includes many features which would cost extra with
other server operating systems. OS/2 Warp Server delivers an integrated platform
for the emerging application server environment as well as a complete set of
traditional file and print services. Warp Server provides an integrated
packaging of OS/2 Warp, LAN Server 4.0 (with some enhancements and fixes),
SystemView for OS/2, remote access, advanced backup disaster and recovery, and a
new printing capability that allows, among other things, printing postscript
files on non-postscript printers.
OS/2 Warp 4 - 1996
Warp 4, code named Merlin, was released in September of 1996 with
a significant facelift for the Workplace Shell. New features include Java, and
VoiceType Navigation and Dictation.
Warp 4 is called the "Universal Client" by IBM because of its
unparalleled network connectivity.
Connect to anything, anywhere with a universal network client
which allows simultaneous connectivity to LAN Server, Warp Server, Windows NT
Server, Novell Netware, Netware Directory Services, PCLAN Program, IPX-SPX,
LANtastic for DOS or OS/2, Warp Connect, Windows NT Workstation, Windows 95,
Windows for Workgroups, TCP/IP (including DHCP, DDNS, FTP, TFTP, Telnet, SLIP,
PPP, SMTP, and SNMP), SNA, NetBIOS. Java is built into Warp 4 so you need no
additional software to run powerful and easy Java applications locally or right
from the World Wide Web.
VoiceType speech recognition makes Warp 4 the only
operating system in the world to allow voice navigation and dictation with no
additional software.
WarpGuides provide intelligent self-configurable
guidance for common tasks. Ideal for new users or users new to OS/2.
Internet
aware desktop allows one-click access to your favorite web sites.
TME 10
Netfinity (SystemView) for exceptional systems management, including DMI
(Desktop Management Interface) support.
Remote Access Services (LAN Distance)
for remote access capabilities which allow you to access your network from home
or the road. Remote Access Services can also allow adhoc WAN configuration for
temporary or emergency use.
Mobile Office Services allows the Road Warrior to
keep files synchronized with the office.
Author biography:
David P. Both is president and founder of Millennium Technology,
Inc., a computer consulting firm in Raleigh, North Carolina which specializes in
OS/2 Warp, OS/2 Warp Server and related products, and Lotus Notes. He spent the
last eight of his 21 years with IBM as the lead support person for OS/2. He is
co-author of the book Inside OS/2 Warp, New Riders Publishing, 1995, and has
published articles in Windows and OS/2 Magazine, Carolina Computer News, LAN
Magazine, OS/2 Magazine, and others. He holds nine IBM technical certifications
and is a Premier IBM Business Partner.
Mr Both's email is dboth@millennium-technology.com
and the Millennium web site is http://www.millennium-technology.com/.