The history of MS-DOS was developed by Seattle Computer Products to run on IBM's new PC.
Version
Date
Comments
1.0
1981
The original version of MS-DOS. This was a renamed version of QDOS which had been purchased by an upstart company called Microsoft.
1.25
1982
This added support for double-sided disks. Previously the disk had to be turned over to use the other side
2.0
1983
This added support for IBM's 10 MB hard disk, directories and double-density 5.25" floppy disks with capacities of 360 KB
2.11
1983
Support for foreign and extended characters was added.
3.0
1984
Support for high-density (1.2 MB) floppy disks and 32 MB hard disks was added.
3.1
1984
Network support was added.
3.3
1987
This release was written to take advantage of IBM's PS/2 computer range. It added support for high density 3.5" floppy disks, more than one partition on hard disks (allowing use of disks bigger than 32 MB) and code pages.
4.0
1988
This version provided XMS support, support for partitions on hard disks up to 2 GB and a graphical shell. It also contained a large number of bugs and many programs refused to run on it.
4.01
1989
The bugs in version 4.0 were fixed.
5.0
1991
This was a major upgrade. It allowed parts of DOS to load itself in the high memory area and certain device drivers and TSRs to run in the unused parts of the upper memory area between 640K and 1024K. This version also added support for IBM's new 2.88 MB floppy disks. An improved BASIC interpreter and text editor were included, as was a disk cache, an undelete utility and a hard-disk partition-table backup program. After the problems with MS-DOS 4, it also provided a utility to make programs think they were running on a different version of MS-DOS.
5.0a
1992/3
This was a minor bug fix which dealt with possibly catastrophic problems with UNDELETE and CHKDSK.
6.0
1993
This was a catch-up with Novell's DR-DOS 6. It added a disk-compression utility called DoubleSpace, a basic anti-virus program and a disk defragmenter. It also finally included a MOVE command, an improved backup program, MSBACKUP and multiple boot configurations. Memory management was also improved by the addition of MEMMAKER. A number of older utilities, such as JOIN and RECOVER were removed. The DOS Shell was released separately as Microsoft felt that there were too many disks.
6.2
1993
Extra security was built into DoubleSpace following complaints of data loss. A new disk checker, SCANDISK, was also introduced, as well as improvements to DISKCOPY and Smart Drive.
6.21
1993
Following legal action by Stac Electronics, Microsoft released this version which had DoubleSpace removed. It came with a voucher for an alternative disk compression program.
6.22
1994
Microsoft licenced a disk-compression package called Double Disk from VertiSoft Systems and renamed it DriveSpace, which was included in this version.
7.0
1995
This version is part of the original version of Windows 95. It provides support for long filenames when Windows is running, but removes a large number of utilities, some of which are on the Windows 95 CD in the \other\oldmsdos directory.
7.1
1997
This version is part of OEM Service Release 2 and later of Windows 95. The main change is support for FAT 32 hard disks, a more efficient and robust way of storing data on large drives.
Microsoft Code name
Interface Manager
Windows 1.x
Chicago
Windows 95
Version 4.00
Frosting
Windows 95 PlusPack!
Detroit
Windows 95 OSR 2
Memphis
Windows 98
Version 4.10
Georgia
Windows ME
Version 4.90
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