CP/M serialization requirements
So I found this in with a Columbia Data Products CP/M-86 manual I recently acquired
I had noticed many Digital Research disks were serialized - that is, no two disks of the same product are identical, they each have a unique serial number written in them. But I had always assumed that they were pre-serialized before purchase.
So, bring your shiny new ~1983 computer home and the first thing you have to do before using any CP/M-86 applications is... mail this the fuck in and wait for a disk?
Meanwhile the user was already plugging in their MS-DOS disk and up and running. It's really no wonder CP/M lost out to DOS. Digital Research fancied themselves as having a higher bracket product even when there was plenty of competition.
It looks like CDP was making these disks by hand - not with a duplicator, and that also explains why both CDP OEM CP/M-86 disks I have have a hand-written serial number on the label. They must have recorded this information and associated it with the serial numbers to discourage unlicensed copying. But I have a hard time imagining all vendors/OEMs did this.
I had noticed many Digital Research disks were serialized - that is, no two disks of the same product are identical, they each have a unique serial number written in them. But I had always assumed that they were pre-serialized before purchase.
So, bring your shiny new ~1983 computer home and the first thing you have to do before using any CP/M-86 applications is... mail this the fuck in and wait for a disk?
Meanwhile the user was already plugging in their MS-DOS disk and up and running. It's really no wonder CP/M lost out to DOS. Digital Research fancied themselves as having a higher bracket product even when there was plenty of competition.
It looks like CDP was making these disks by hand - not with a duplicator, and that also explains why both CDP OEM CP/M-86 disks I have have a hand-written serial number on the label. They must have recorded this information and associated it with the serial numbers to discourage unlicensed copying. But I have a hard time imagining all vendors/OEMs did this.
Comments
I dare say most current "classes" on the subject are just a regurgitation of whatever is on Wikipedia. :P
But that is why I like to dig through this old software. It sometimes turns up little long forgotten historical oddities.
The nice thing about 8" CP/M disks is that the single sided single density disks (about 250k) were an industry standard. So when I ordered my accounting package, there was no need to specify my system. They were all shipped on the SSSD 8" disks. I never had to put up with the incompatibilty problems of 5.25" disks.
DIgital Research had really poor user documentation. It seemed to be aimed only at OEMs.
Thankfully, Pickles & Trout CP/M came with very good manuals for the end user.
I later used Montezuma CP/M on my TRS80 Model 4, and their manuals were also very good.
Just think, if DR hadn't been so 'high & mighty' in their negotiations with IBM on the new OS for the PC, CP/M86 would have been the Dos standard.