article

Gary Arlen Kildall (May 19, 1942July 11, 1994) was the creator of the CP/M operating system and GEM Desktop graphical user interface, and founder of Digital Research, Inc.

Career


Kildall received his PhD in computer science from the University of Washington in 1972. While working as a professor at the Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) US Navy in Monterey, California, he created implementations of the PL/I programming language for the Intel 4004 and 8008 CPUs. He referred to these versions as PL/M (M for microcomputer). During this time Kildall introduced the theory of data-flow analysis that is widely used in optimizing compilers. *

In 1973, Kildall began work on a disk operating system in order to create a host development environment for PL/M on microcomputers, and ended up with CP/M. He founded Digital Research after his resignation from NPS in 1976 and continued work on CP/M, which he originally sold in classified ads in the back pages of computer magazines. With the release of the Altair 8800 in January 1975 there was a commercial system capable of running CP/M, and before the end of the year a number of clones had appeared with disk drives that required it. By 1977, it was the most popular microcomputer operating system in existence, running on nearly every Intel 8080 or Zilog Z80 based computer.

In 1980, IBM approached Digital Research for a version of CP/M for its upcoming IBM PC. Legend has it that Kildall snubbed the IBM representatives by going flying in his Pitts Special (an aerobatic biplane) for several hours. Although widespread, the story is generally not accepted to be true because it was Kildall's wife, Dorothy, who handled business negotiations, not Kildall himself. Another story has it that IBM representatives wanted Dorothy to sign their standard non-disclosure agreement, which Dorothy considered overly burdensome. Kildall associate Gordon Eubanks has said that the non-disclosure was signed, but that Kildall was not enthusiastic about porting CP/M to the IBM PC's 8088 processorGordon Eubanks oral history, p. 12 (PDF file) recorded November 8, 2000 by ComputerWorld magazine. IBM related the story to Bill Gates, who was already providing the ROM BASIC interpreter for the PC, and Gates offered to provide an operating system as well, but he did not own one at the time. Seattle Computer Products was building a computer around the new Intel 8088 chip, and they needed a operating system for it. Tim Paterson, one of their employees, wrote QDOS, which stands for "Quick and Dirty Operating System." Gates obtained rights to it and licensed it to IBM, thus beginning MS-DOS/PC-DOS.

The possible infringement problems between PC-DOS and CP/M have been the source of much speculation, with second-hand accounts of threatened lawsuits and secret deals, but none of the parties involved ever spoke publicly. Kildall wrote a 226-page memoir shortly before his death in 1994 that contained his account, but the memoir to date has not been published, although it served as source material for a chapter about Kildall and CP/M in the 2004 book They Made America by Harold Evans.

Kildall believed that PC-DOS infringed on CP/M's copyright, but software copyright law was in its infancy—the decision in the landmark Apple v. Franklin case was still two years away—and according to accounts of Kildall's employees and friends, Kildall was wary of engaging IBM in a lengthy and costly lawsuit. Nevertheless, he confronted IBM in late 1980 with his allegation, and they agreed to offer CP/M as an OS option for the PC in return for Digital's release of liabilityEubanks oral history, p. 13.

When the IBM PC was introduced, IBM sold the operating system as an unbundled (but necessary) option. One of the operating system options was PC-DOS, priced at US$60. A new port of CP/M, called CP/M-86, was offered a few months later and priced at $240. Largely due to its early availability and the substantial price difference, PC-DOS became the preferred operating system. IBM's decision to source its favored operating system from Microsoft marked the beginning of Digital Research's decline.

After CP/M, concerned by the proliferation of BASIC on microcomputers, Kildall created PL/I-80, a ANSI standard subset of the full PL/I programming language, to run on CP/M based microcomputers. He also went on to create a variety of experimental projects, including an implementation of the Logo educational programming language and interfaces between computers and CD-ROM drives and videodisc players. He created a CD-ROM version of Grolier's Encyclopedia. He left Digital Research in 1991 when the company was sold to Novell, and moved to suburban Austin, Texas, keeping a second home in California.

Death


Friends and acquaintances reported that Kildall remained bitter that MS-DOS and Microsoft thrived while he languished in obscurity. Most of the internal features of MS-DOS based on CP/M were superseded in later versions, but DOS retained many user-visible similarities. Kildall was particularly piqued when the University of Washington asked him, as a distinguished graduate, to attend their computer science program anniversary in 1992, but gave the keynote speech to college dropout Bill Gates. Kildall died in 1994 of uncertain causes at the Franklin Street Bar & Grill in Monterey, California at the age of 52 after receiving a blow to the head. Gary Kildall was buried in Evergreen-Washelli Cemetery North Seattle, Washington

Recognition


In March 1995, Kildall was posthumously honored by the Software Publishers Association (now the Software and Information Industry Association) for his contributions to the computer industry:

  • Introduction of operating systems with preemptive multitasking and windowing capabilities and menu-driven user interfaces.
  • Creation of the first diskette track buffering schemes, read-ahead algorithms, file directory caches, and RAM disk emulators.
  • Introduction of a binary recompiler in the 1980s.
  • The first programming language and first compiler specifically for microprocessors.
  • The first microprocessor disk operating system, which eventually sold a quarter million copies.
  • The first computer interface for video disks to allow automatic nonlinear playback, presaging today's interactive multimedia.
  • The file system and data structures for the first consumer CD-ROM.
  • The first successful open-system architecture by segregating system-specific hardware interfaces in a set of BIOS routines, making the whole third-party software industry possible.

Footnotes


External links


1942 births | 1994 deaths | American computer programmers | Computer pioneers | Computer scientists | Digital Research

Gary Kildall | Gary Kildall | Gary Kildall | 게리 킬달 | Gary Kildall | ゲイリー・キルドール | Gary Kildall

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Gary Kildall".

Home Pageartsbusinesscomputersgameshealthhospitalshomekids & teensnewsphysiciansrecreationreferenceregionalscienceshoppingsocietysportsworld