Seattle Computer Products: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "{{Infobox_Company | company_name = Seattle Computer Products| company_logo = 100px| company_type = Private| foundation = 1978 (closed in the late 1980s)| location = Tukwila, Washington, USA| key_people = Rodney Maurice Brock, founder| num_employees = 2| industry = Computer products| products = 86-DOS| homepage = N/A| }} '''Seattle Computer Products''' was a co...") |
(fix image size) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Infobox_Company | | {{Infobox_Company | | ||
company_name = Seattle Computer Products| | company_name = Seattle Computer Products| | ||
company_logo = [[File:Seattle Computer Products logo.png| | company_logo = [[File:Seattle Computer Products logo.png|300px]]| | ||
company_type = Private| | company_type = Private| | ||
foundation = 1978 (closed in the late 1980s)| | foundation = 1978 (closed in the late 1980s)| |
Revision as of 12:00, 25 October 2023
Seattle Computer Products | |
Type | Private |
---|---|
Founded | 1978 (closed in the late 1980s) |
Headquarters | Tukwila, Washington, USA |
Key people | Rodney Maurice Brock, founder |
Industry | Computer products |
Products | 86-DOS |
Number of people | 2 |
Website | N/A |
Seattle Computer Products was a computer manufacturer and operating system developer.
History
Seattle Computer Products was founded by Rodney Maurice Brock in 1978.
Tim Paterson, a twenty-two-year-old who was hired in June 1978, designed a board for the Intel 8086 processor. Released in November 1979, it was one of the first 8086 computers available for sale. A standalone version of Microsoft BASIC, was available but Digital Research had yet to release the 8086 compatible version of CP/M.
Because the computer lacked an operating system, Tim Patterson designed QDOS, or Quick-and-Dirty Operating System. This operating system evolved into 86-DOS, which was purchased by Microsoft and became the basis of the 1981 release of MS-DOS 1.0 and IBM PC DOS 1.0.
As the decade progressed, demand for 8086 computers diminished. Due to this, Seattle Computer Products closed in the late 1980s.