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  1. MSX-DOS is a discontinued disk operating system developed by Microsoft 's Japan subsidiary for the 8-bit home computer standard MSX, and is a cross between MS-DOS v1.25 and CP/M-80 v2.2.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MSX-DOS
    One of Microsoft’s most significant contributions to the MSX platform was the creation of MSX-DOS, an operating system specifically tailored for MSX computers. MSX-DOS was based on Microsoft’s popular MS-DOS, which was used in IBM-compatible PCs.
    news.xbox.com/en-us/2023/10/27/celebrating-40-y…
  2. People also ask
    It supports keyboard input, screen output, and printer output. MSX-DOS, which has a flexible file manager that does not depend on the physical structure of the disk, supports various media and uses 3.5 inch double density disks as standard. Either a one-sided disk called 1DD or two-sided disk called 2DD is used.
    MSX-DOS is a flexible and extendable operating system. The standard commands are included in the COMMAND.COM and COMMAND2.COM files, but the OS can be extended with tools under the form of new COM files and batch files, including AUTOEXEC.BAT (on MSX-DOS 1 and higher) and REBOOT.BAT (on MSX-DOS 2 and higher).
    MSX-DOS, created on the basis of MSX-DOS (ver 1.25) which is a disk operating system for 16-bit personal computers, uses the same file format as MS-DOS. It is compatible with MS-DOS at the file level so that MSX-DOS can read and write files written on MS-DOS disks. In turn MS-DOS can read and write files created by MSX-DOS.
    MSX-DOS consists of the following modules: COMMAND.COM, MSXDOS.SYS, and a disk interface ROM. It resides in memory as shown in Figure 3.1 when MSX-DOS is active. COMMAND.COM and MSXDOS.SYS are disk files until MSX-DOS is booted and then read into RAM after that. Disk interface ROM includes a disk driver, DOS kernel, and DISK-BASIC interpreter.
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    MSX-DOS - Wikipedia

    MSX-DOS is a discontinued disk operating system developed by Microsoft's Japan subsidiary for the 8-bit home computer standard MSX, and is a cross between MS-DOS v1.25 and CP/M-80 v2.2. See more

    MSX-DOS and the extended BASIC with 3½-inch floppy disk support were simultaneously developed by Microsoft and ASCII Corporation as a software and hardware standard … See more

    On August 10, 1983, Paul Allen called Tim Paterson, original author of 86-DOS and MS-DOS 1.x, asking him to do a "Z80 version of MS … See more

    • MSX-DOS2: released in 1988, it featured many improvements such as subdirectories, memory management up to 16MB and … See more

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  4. MSX-DOS 2 - MSX Wiki

  5. The History of MSX-DOS - MSX Wiki

    WebSep 26, 2020 · Despite it's age, the development of MSX-DOS has been pretty well documented. Tim Paterson, the original author, has shared details on his role during development. Also, a changelog has been …

  6. CHAPTER 3 - MSX-DOS | MSX2-Technical-Handbook

  7. The Ultimate MSX FAQ - MSX-DOS 2 section

  8. MSX-DOS – ArchiveOS

  9. Downloads | MSX Resource Center

  10. The making of MSX-DOS | MSX Resource Center

    Webby Maggoo on 16-02-2014, 15:58. Topic: Media. Tags: MSX DOS. Languages: Tim Paterson, author the original MS DOS 1 and programmer of MSX-DOS was kind enough to answer a few questions and share his …