PC Pro Magazine

TURN YOUR PC INTO A 1980s COMPUTER

If the world today seems depressing, why not revisit the fun and excitement of computing in the 1980s? The operating system you’re probably using now has its roots all the way back in 1981, when MS-DOS first hit the scene (see more on this story in Retro, p123). Their established competitor, CP/M, had been shipping since the middle of the previous decade, but it never caught on in the same way – although it would later make its way into many British homes as the OS that underpinned the Amstrad PCW range of word-processing computers.

Running any of these text-based OSes today feels like a dry and limited experience, but you don’t have to skip ahead very far to get to the birth of Windows. Version 1.0 shipped in 1985, followed up later the same year with 1.01 – and then in 1987 by Windows 2.0, which introduced the radical new feature of overlapping application windows. Radical for PCs, at least.

After that, of course, came Windows 3.0, which was the first edition to really gain mainstream appeal – a success that Microsoft built on with the significantly updated Windows 3.1. Those editions weren’t released until 1990 and 1992 respectively, however, so don’t qualify if you

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from PC Pro Magazine

PC Pro Magazine4 min read
What Lee Grant’s Customers Want From Windows 12
Lee Grant runs a repair shop in Kirkheaton with his wife Alison, as regular readers of our Real World Computing section will know (see p113). As such, they kindly give him a constant stream of feedback about what they want to see in Windows 12. Or, t
PC Pro Magazine5 min read
Apple iPad Pro (M4)
SCORE PRICE 13in/256GB, £1,083 (£1,299 inc VAT) from apple.com/uk The iPad Pro has long been the best tablet on the market, but Apple isn’t resting on its past success. This year’s models introduce a new processor, a striking ultra-slim design and th
PC Pro Magazine2 min read
What PC Pro Readers Want: Discord
“Two editions – primarily a full fat one with the same CPU requirements as Win11, and then a second version that supports all the Intel CPUs that 11 doesn’t, with everything else that can be layered on top from the regular full fat version (purely to

Related Books & Audiobooks