10 comments

  • gnabgib 1 hour ago
    Discussion, on the source, at the time (79 points, 24 days ago, 19 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47957494

    Or on the GitHub clone (162 points, 15 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47946813

  • locusofself 34 minutes ago
    wow, they had to OCR it back in from paper printouts

    > This source code is old enough that it hadn’t been stored digitally. “A dedicated team of historians and preservationists led by Yufeng Gao and Rich Cini,” calling itself the “DOS Disassembly Group,” painstakingly transcribed and scanned in code from paper printouts provided by Paterson. This process was made even more difficult because modern OCR software struggled with the quality of the decades-old printout.

    • SoftTalker 28 minutes ago
      Yet another case where text printed on paper outlived any digital storage.
      • petcat 1 minute ago
        > struggled with the quality of the decades-old printout.

        barely

        It sounds like this printout has deteriorated badly and was barely readable.

      • jshier 14 minutes ago
        Seems like it was never digitally stored in the first place, and the printed text was barely readable due to age. Not really a big win for paper.
        • SoftTalker 5 minutes ago
          Well it had to have been on disk or tape at some point. It wasn't all typed in by hand every time they needed to build a new version.
  • imoverclocked 35 minutes ago
    Time to find vulnerabilities!

    I remember in the naughts, coming across a dos machine that was quite out of time… even for the university basement it was living in next to a pile of lead brick. Its only job was to run an instrument via an home-built ISA card and write data out to 5.25” floppies.

    What uses would this code have in 2026?

  • userbinator 1 hour ago
    I wonder how long it'll be before they release the source for the earliest Windows versions. The fact that they still have the source for this very old DOS at least gives hope that they also do for old Windows.
    • teamsolid 54 minutes ago
      I am sure that there is a lot good material to take inspiration and learning even from the early Windows 3.11.
      • mycall 18 minutes ago
        Do a deep dive into how OS/360 formalized to having DOS.
      • SoftTalker 28 minutes ago
        /s ?
  • teamsolid 56 minutes ago
    It is wonderful how early years of modern computing was brilliant. We treated machines as they really are: machines. Performance, creativity, science..., all possible to make a 386 machine work. Nowadays is all about libraries, virtualization, [bad] code over [bad] code over [bad] code..., I dont like it.
  • dang 1 hour ago
    Recent and related:

    Microsoft open sources DOS 1.00 on 45th anniversary - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47957494 - April 2026 (19 comments)

  • froyooh 42 minutes ago
    Back when it was all written by hand and optimized well.
  • signa11 46 minutes ago
    in the words of mr. mitch-hedburg “here, you throw this away“