Disk operating system
From Wikinfo
In times when hard disk drives and even floppy disk drives were optional rather than default features of operating systems, being a Disk Operating System (i.e. disk-based or disk-aware) was a mark of distinction.
A number of such systems exist; the Commodore 64 and the Apple II home computers each featured a 'DOS', as did (on the other end of the spectrum) IBM's System/370 and System/390 series of mainframes (eg, DOS/VSE, Disk Operating System/Virtual Storage Extended).
The best known family of operating systems called "DOS" is that running on IBM PCs. The original version was provided to IBM by Microsoft, and marketed as "PC-DOS". Later versions were also sold as "MS-DOS". Digital Research produced a compatible variant known as "DR-DOS", taken over (after a buyout of Digital Research) by Novell. This became "OpenDOS" for a while. There is also a free version named "FreeDOS".
See also: List of DOS commands
External Links
References
- Adapted from the Wikipedia article, "Disk_operating_system" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disk_operating_system, used under the GNU Free Documentation License

