Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!van-bc!rsoft!mindlink!a577 From: a577@mindlink.UUCP (Curt Sampson) Newsgroups: comp.os.cpm Subject: Why Bother With CP/M? Message-ID: <1435@mindlink.UUCP> Date: 6 Apr 90 20:43:00 GMT Organization: MIND LINK! - British Columbia, Canada Lines: 35 > karn@jupiter..bellcore.com writes: > > Yes, my code did indeed begin life on CP/M, specifically the Xerox 820. > But this was five years ago, and much has happened in the meantime to PC > clone pricing and availability to make me wonder why anybody would still > be interested in CP/M. With XT clone boards having bottomed out at $60 > or so, and with a well-established and highly competitive supplier network > supporting PC technology, why bother with Z-80s and CP/M? I just don't see > the point. There are several reasons. One is cost. I bought a Kaypro 4 for $200, which is the price of two double sided drives up here. (Buy two drives, get computer thrown in free! What a deal!) To get an equivalant IBM system would have cost me about $500-$600 for the hardware and probably another couple hundred for the software. A good electronic type writer costs as much as my whole system (it cost me another $85 for the printer). Another reason is speed. My Kaypro runs faster for non-number crunching tasks than an 8 MHz XT with floppy drives (and in some cases, even a hard drive system). There's no way that a machine can load a 200K program faster than a machine can load a 25K program. And because the CP/M machine is doing a lot less, even with less processing power it is often faster. I get by fine without a lot of the extras that the IBM programs do. (I have no particular need for windows.) The last reason is that it's fun! CP/M machines are simple enough that you can play around and hack with the OS without any major problems. If this is what makes someone happy, then that's what they should be doing, no matter how cheap XT motherboards are. I'm not trying to start any kind of a "my computer is better than yours" war here, just trying to point out why I prefer my CP/M machine to my IBM XT clone. (I just bought the XT clone to run a BBS.) Feel free to flame me though--just send it to net.comp.amiga. :-) -CJS ( Curt_Sampson@mindlink.UUCP )