Category: Retro Computing

  • 86-DOS 1.00 Source Code Found in a Garage and Open-Sourced on Its 45th Anniversary

    86-DOS 1.00 Source Code Found in a Garage and Open-Sourced on Its 45th Anniversary

    This is the kind of software archaeology that makes you stop and appreciate just how far we’ve come. Microsoft has open-sourced the earliest DOS source code — 86-DOS 1.00 — and the story behind it is almost as interesting as the code itself.

    The Discovery

    Tim Paterson, the inventor of 86-DOS, had a stack of yellowed dot-matrix printouts of the original source code sitting in his garage. Not backed up to cloud storage, not preserved in some corporate archive — literally printed on paper, sitting in a garage for 45 years. When Microsoft VP Scott Hanselman got hold of them, he confirmed that the transcribed code “is perfect and recompiles byte for byte to the original binaries.”

    Hanselman put it perfectly on Microsoft’s blog: “The earliest DOS source code was found on printer paper in Tim Paterson’s garage so we’ve open-sourced it on 86-DOS 1.00’s 45th anniversary! This is next-level software archaeology for study, preservation, and plain ol’ curiosity.”

    What’s in the Repository

    The GitHub repository includes:

    • The 86-DOS 1.00 kernel — the original code before Microsoft even touched it
    • PC-DOS 1.00 pre-release kernels and utilities — showing Microsoft’s early modifications
    • The Microsoft BASIC-86 Compiler runtime library — the development toolchain from the era
    • Scans of the original printouts in PDF and PNG format via the Internet Archive, including Paterson’s handwritten notes in the margins

    You can literally watch the code evolve from Tim Paterson’s 86-DOS into Microsoft’s PC-DOS 1.00, including the early versions of utilities like CHKDSK that we still use today.

    The Price of Revolution

    Here’s the bit that still blows my mind: Microsoft purchased 86-DOS from Seattle Computer Products and Tim Paterson for approximately $75,000. That’s the entire operating system that would become the foundation of the PC industry. Adjusted for inflation, that’s roughly $350,000 today — less than the cost of a single developer’s salary at Microsoft in 2026.

    Context in the DOS Open-Sourcing Story

    This isn’t the first time Microsoft has gone back and open-sourced DOS. MS-DOS 1.25 and 2.11 were released to GitHub in 2018, and MS-DOS 4.00 followed under the MIT License in April 2024. But 86-DOS 1.00 is the original — the code as it existed before Microsoft even owned it.

    The Microsoft blog notes that this “offers rare insight into how MS-DOS/PC-DOS came to be, and how operating system development was done at the time, not as it was later reconstructed.”

    What Hasn’t Been Released

    Despite this generous streak with DOS, Microsoft has not open-sourced any version of Windows. The only Windows XP source code available to the public came through leaks, not official channels. So while the DOS legacy is now fully documented and preserved, the Windows story remains locked behind corporate walls.

    Why This Matters

    Beyond the nostalgia factor (and there’s plenty of that), this is a genuine piece of computing history. The 86-DOS source code shows how a two-pass assembler and a handful of C routines built the operating system that launched the IBM PC revolution. Every modern operating system owes something to the design decisions made in those few thousand lines of code.

    The fact that it survived on dot-matrix printouts in a garage is a reminder that software preservation is still an unsolved problem. We worry about Bitrot on cloud storage, but the original source code for the most influential operating system in history was on printer paper.

    Worth a browse through the repo if you’ve got an hour — the handwritten notes in the margins are a particularly nice touch.

  • When Jeeves Goes Quiet: Ask.com Shuts Down After 25 Years

    When Jeeves Goes Quiet: Ask.com Shuts Down After 25 Years

    If you’re under 30, you’ve probably never heard of Ask.com. But for anyone who spent their formative years on the early web, it was the third pillar of search — the one with the butler.

    As of May 1, 2026, Ask.com has officially shut down, according to a farewell page now live at ask.com. The closure comes from parent company IAC Inc., which has owned the service since 2015, citing a decision to “discontinue our search business, which includes Ask.com” while “sharpening its focus” elsewhere.

    The farewell message has an almost literary grace:

    “Every great search must come to an end. After 25 years of answering the world’s questions, Ask.com officially closed on May 1, 2026.”

    “To the millions who asked… thank you for your endless curiosity, your loyalty, and your trust.”

    And then, the cherry on top: “Jeeves’ spirit endures.”

    Ask.com — originally launched as Ask Jeeves in 1996 and relaunched as Ask.com in 2001 — was once one of the “big three” search engines alongside Google and Yahoo. Its question-and-answer interface, built around Jeeves the virtual butler, was genuinely novel for an era when you actually needed a directory rather than an algorithm parsing HTML.

    In 2010, Ask.com shut down its own search crawler entirely. The writing had been on the wall for years by then. Wikipedia now lists May 1, 2026 as the official closure date.

    The Reddit reaction is telling: several commenters said they thought Ask had shut down years ago. For many, the brand had already faded long before the doors actually closed.

    Curiously, the farewell page itself is built with Tailwind CSS — the last remaining page of a search engine that once competed with Google is styled with the same utility-first framework that powers much of today’s web. The page has no search box. Just the logo, the text, and a digital curtain call.

    It’s a reminder that in search — the most competitive space in tech history — there’s still room for one more to wave goodbye.

    Sources:
    Ask.com farewell page — Official closure announcement (May 1, 2026)
    Wikipedia: Ask.com — History, search crawler shutdown (2010), closure confirmation
    Reddit r/90s discussion — Community reaction