| ▲ | d3Xt3r 5 hours ago | |||||||
Well, technically Windows 2.1 (released May 1988) came before OS/2 1.1 (released October 1988). OS/2 1.0 was text-only. So at least for 5 months in 1998, Windows technically beat OS/2. And OS/2 1.1 was very similar to Windows 2.1, so it's arguable if it was actually much better. OS/2 1.2 was a massive leap though, not only beating Microsoft GUI wise by a whole year, they even implemented tons of advanced features that we didn't see until Windows 95. | ||||||||
| ▲ | didgetmaster 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
When I started working at Novell in October 1988, I was on the OS/2 team. The version I installed first was 1.0 so I remember that there was no GUI. A few months later we got the update (1.1) with the GUI. What I remember the most is that they ordered us memory expansion cards that gave us an extra 4MB of RAM for a total of 5MB. I didn't see the actual invoice, but I remember them telling me that the expansion card cost about $2,000. I try to remember that when I complain about memory DIMMs measuring in the dozens of GB going up a bit in price. | ||||||||
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| ▲ | mikestew 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
OP is referring to OS/2 2.0 after IBM took over the OS, not the previous Microsoft 1.x versions. The post is a quote from IBM’s marketing. https://www.reddit.com/r/retrobattlestations/comments/nl43aq... | ||||||||