Some disk operating systems are the operating systems for the entire computer system. • The
Burroughs (now Unisys)
Master Control Program (MCP) for the
B5000 originally runs from a drum, but starting with the B5500 it runs from a disk. It is the basis for the MCP on the B6500, B7500, and successors. • The SIPROS,
Chippewa Operating System (COS),
SCOPE, MACE and
KRONOS operating systems on the
Control Data Corporation (CDC)
6000 series and
7600 are all disk operating systems. KRONOS became
NOS and SCOPE became NOS/BE. • The
GECOS operating system for the
GE (later
Honeywell and
Groupe Bull)
600 family of
mainframe computers (it later became GCOS). • The IBM Basic Operating System/360 (
BOS/360),
Disk Operating System/360 (DOS/360) and
Operating System/360 (OS/360) are standard for all but the smallest
System/360 installations; the
360/67 also has Control Program-67 /Cambridge Monitor System (
CP-67/CMS) and Time Sharing System/360 (
TSS/360). BOS is gone, CP-67/CMS has evolved into
z/VM, DOS has evolved into
z/VSE, OS has evolved into
z/OS and TSS/360 evolved into TSS/370 PRPQ, which is now gone. • The
EXEC II operating system for the
UNIVAC 1107 and
1108, and the
EXEC 8 operating system for the 1108, which has evolved into OS 2200 for the
Unisys ClearPath Dorado Series. • The
DOS-11 operating system for
DEC PDP-11 minicomputers. •
CP/M is a disk operating system, as the main or alternate operating system for numerous microcomputers of the 1970s and 1980s. •
Apple DOS is the primary operating system for the
Apple II, from 1979 with the introduction of the
floppy disk drive, until 1983 when it was replaced by
ProDOS. •
TRSDOS is the operating system for the
TRS-80 line of computers from Tandy. •
MS-DOS for
IBM PC compatibles with
Intel x86 CPUs.
86-DOS was modeled on
CP/M, and then was adapted as the basis for
Microsoft's
MS-DOS. It was rebranded by IBM as
PC DOS until 1993. Various compatible systems were later produced by different organizations, starting with
DR-DOS in 1988. ==See also==