The Northstar Advantage with the CP/M system was the absolute first computer that I worked on and that I owned… At that time it was quite a peak in computing technology, and the standard PC with its modular structure was only beginning to gain ground here in the competition of various “spontaneous” sweat. I have tried and worked with practically every one of the different operating systems, but the trivial simplicity of CP/M semantics and the logic of simple one-line programs with textual shorthand commands allowed me to create even a very complex environment, even with the help of a sequence of very simple commands, which I am a user of he could understand even at the level of the hw layer. in this regard, I will miss the system.. today, I would not be able to write 2000 dk in assembler for a specific processor off the top of my head like I did then.. it would have been convenient if you could design your own compiler and decompiler, normally name the individual free “BIOS” and Peripherals or memory blocks are called “by name” and the compiler still “crunched” it and instead of the name of the device, registry, etc., it put a specific physical address. During decompilation, you could choose whether you wanted hexadecimal code, assembler, or you created and named your own list of functions, cities, processes, variables, etc., register, raster, etc.. and the computer explained to you in your own words when decompiling from the machine code, what actually where and for how long..
Discussion: Windows could then control this system
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