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Member since:
2010-01-07
The IBM PC was the natural upgrade path from CP/M for both user and developer.
That made the MS-DOS PC a viable commercial product before the cloning of the IBM PC BIOS.
Product based on the use of off-the-shelf hardware and an OS that sold for $40 retail list.
The IBM PC and PC clone begin to move in on the still-infant home and home office market.
With Sierra's King Quest, the light begins to dawn:
Your 16 bit office wokhorse is a viable platform for PC gaming ---
and there is a bonus:
The modular design of the PC makes upgrading video and sound easy and affordable.
The Microsoft operating system performs well on hardware that is mid-line at the time of release and entry level a year or two later.
Wamart.com stocks 245 Windows 7 laptops, with the 64 bit Home Premium laptop starting at $300.
Top of the line at Walmart.com is an i7 HP "Silver" laptop with a 17" screen, 8 GB RAM, 1.5 TB HDD, Radeon HD 6850M Graphics, and Blu-Ray for $1600.
The Mac was - at least in the beginning - was notoriously resource intensive. It was a stylish machine that found a significant niche market. But nothing more than that.
Win 3 and Win 95 were transitional operating systems - with, let us say, a more populist focus - that preserved MS-DOS compatibility while introducing a generation of users to a graphical user interface at a price they could afford.