We continue our look at the old warhorse, DOS. This time it is the file system.
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Hosted by Ahuka on Friday 2022-04-08 is flagged as Clean and is released under a CC-BY-SA license.
Tags: DOS, early PC computing, file system.
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Part of the series: DOS
DOS is a general acronym for "Disk Operating System", though it came to refer to the operating system used in the IBM PC, particularly Microsoft's MS-DOS.
One key to working with DOS is to understand the file system. This is not just about organizing files, though that is certainly a part of it, but also about keeping your system running smoothly and recovering lost files in some circumstances.
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Comments
Comment #1 posted on 2022-04-08T02:45:21Z by zen_floater2
Squirrel applause
Ahhh, the 1980's. FAT and Assembler.
This is exactly why we drank beer when we wrote code till 3 am.
It was a good program sir..
Comment #2 posted on 2022-04-08T15:43:33Z by Miguel
Good blast from the past
Man, just entering and he makes me feels old (I'm old)
This is a very good one.
Complete, clear and sufficiently simple explanation of how FAT works, understanding this old filesystems is a very good way to enter the new filesystems (which intend to solve many of the problems Ahuka mentions).
And remember the DOS days is also very nice.
Thanks for the shows and the work of this community.
Greetings from México.
Excuse my bad english, I learned from a TRS80 manual.
Comment #3 posted on 2022-04-08T21:43:08Z by Kevin O'Brien
Thank you
I'm glad you enjoyed it. Your English is better than my Spanish at this point, but I am learning your language, and hope to visit Mexico. I am already planning a trip to Spain.
Comment #4 posted on 2022-04-13T05:25:20Z by Some Guy On The Internet
I'm not old enough.
Was RAID available for MS-DOS? If so, could you perform a RAID 1 using floppy disks?
Comment #5 posted on 2022-04-14T12:21:31Z by Kevin O'Brien
RAID on DOS
I have to admit I never looked into it. When I was running DOS in the 1980s even getting a hard drive was something of a novelty.
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