The company's most important early product was a series of utilities which enabled evasion of
copy protection, allowing exact duplicates to be made of
copy-protected diskettes, duplicating the analog fingerprinting measures. The first version, Copy II Plus v1.0 (for the
Apple II), was released in June 1981. With the success of the
IBM PC and
compatibles, a version for that platform - Copy II PC (copy2pc) - was released in 1983. CPS said that Copy II PC was capable of copying 90% of software. By then CPS said it had sold 10,000 Copy II PC Deluxe Boards, at a rate of several thousand a month. Mostly marketed to existing customers of Copy II PC, the expansion card comes with a special version of that software. CPS said that 1,000 beta testers found that the card was capable of copying Softguard's Superlock, and only failing against
Prolok. The card is able to read, write, and copy disks from Apple II and
Macintosh computer systems as well. Copy II PC's main competitor was
Quaid Software's
CopyWrite, which did not have a hardware component. CPS also released Option Board hardware with TransCopy software for duplicating copy-protected floppy diskettes. In 1985, CPS released
PC Tools, an integrated graphical DOS shell and utilities package. PC Tools was an instant success and became Central Point's flagship product, and positioned the company as the major competitor to
Peter Norton Computing and its
Norton Utilities and
Norton Commander. CPS later manufactured a Macintosh version called
Mac Tools. CPS licensed the Mirror, Undelete, and Unformat components of PC Tools to
Microsoft for inclusion in MS-DOS versions 5.x and 6.x as external DOS utilities. CPS File Manager was ahead of its time, with features such as view
ZIP archives as directories and a file/picture viewer. In 1993, CPS released PC Tools for
Windows 2.0 which ran on
Windows 3.1. After the Symantec acquisition the programmer group that created PCTW 2.0 created
Norton Navigator for
Windows 95 and Symantec unbundled the File Manager used in PCTW 2.0 and released it as PC-Tools File Manager 3.0 for Windows 3.1 The lateness of PCTW to the Windows market was a major factor in why CPS was acquired by Symantec.
Windows Server at the time was not viewed as a credible alternative to
Novell NetWare - the first version of Windows Server was released in 1993 - and the desktop and server software products market was completely centered on Novell NetWare. The subsequent stumble by Novell to maintain dominance in the server market came years later and had nothing to do with the acquisition. Instead, like many software vendors, CPS underestimated how rapidly users were going to shift to Windows from DOS. CPS's other major desktop product was Central Point Anti-Virus (CPAV), whose main competitor was
Norton AntiVirus. CPAV was a licensed version of
Carmel Software's
Turbo Anti-Virus; CPS, in turn, licensed CPAV to Microsoft to create
Microsoft Antivirus for DOS (MSAV) and Windows (MWAV). CPS also released CPAV for Netware 3.xx and 4.x Netware servers in 1993. Central Point also sold the
Apple II clone Laser 128 by mail. ==List of CPS products==