MS-DOS 7
MS-DOS 7 is a real mode operating system for IBM PC compatibles. Unlike earlier versions of MS-DOS, it was not released separately by Microsoft,[3] but included in the Windows 9x family of operating systems.[4] Windows 95 RTM reports it as MS-DOS 7.0,[5] and Windows 95 OSR 2.x and Windows 98 report as 7.1.[5] The real-mode MS-DOS 7.x is contained in the IO.SYS file.[6] AnnouncementAfter the release of MS-DOS 6, Microsoft preannounced in 1994 that MS-DOS 7 would incorporate multitasking and a few other new features planned for the upcoming Windows 4.0, codenamed Chicago. IBM also promised a "fancy", multitasking PC DOS 7.[7] Continuing what Computerworld called a "vaporware tornado", Microsoft also projected this revised combination of Windows and MS-DOS to require a low-end computer with only 4 MB of RAM.[8] Windows 4.0 was released branded as Windows 95, and Microsoft canceled the standalone version of MS-DOS 7 and instead included it with Windows 95.[9] The proposed multitasking and multithreading technology was canceled from MS-DOS 7.0.[citation needed] New featuresMS-DOS 7.0 adds support for long filename (LFN) using the VFAT file system,[10] whereas earlier versions do not show long filenames even with a driver such as DOSLFN. It supports larger extended memory (up to 4GB) via its HIMEM.SYS driver. Various smaller improvements include enhanced DOS commands, more efficient use of UMB memory (COMMAND.COM and part of the DOS kernel are loaded high automatically), and using environment variables directly in the DOS command. MS-DOS 7.1 adds FAT32 support[11] for larger than 2GB and up to 2TB per volume,[12] and MS-DOS 7.0 and earlier versions of MS-DOS only support FAT12 and FAT16.[13] Logical block addressing (LBA) is supported in MS-DOS 7 for accessing larger hard disks, unlike earlier versions which only supported cylinder-head-sector (CHS)-based addressing. Unlike MS-DOS 7.0, MS-DOS 7.1 recognizes a hard disk beyond the first 8.4GB.[14] Year 2000 support was added to DIR command via the new /4 option. MS-DOS 7.x adds support for running the graphical interface of Windows 9x,[10] which cannot be run on older MS-DOS releases. Even though VER command usually shows the Windows version, the MS-DOS version is also officially mentioned in other places. For example, Windows 95 OSR2 or Windows 98's OverviewAccording to Caldera which sold DR-DOS, Windows 95 is not one integrated software product, but rather a combination of two products, MS-DOS 7.0 and Windows 4.0, packaged together to look as a single product. Though MS-DOS 7.0 and Windows 4.0 could be readily segregated and marketed as different products, Microsoft stopped marketing Windows and MS-DOS separately with the release of Windows 95.[15] A major difference from earlier versions of MS-DOS is the usage of the MSDOS.SYS file.[16] In MS-DOS 7, this is not a binary file, but a pure setting file. The older boot style, where Windows is not automatically started and the system boots into a DOS command shell, can use that same style by setting ReceptionAt Microsoft's 1994 preannouncement, the stripped down Windows 4.0 with MS-DOS 7 was expected to be "at the expense of Windows NT" as the biggest competitor of the much more featureful and resource-consuming Windows NT.[8] See alsoWikimedia Commons has media related to MS-DOS. References
Further reading
Information related to MS-DOS 7 |