68K/OS
68K/OS was a computer operating system developed by GST Computer Systems for the Sinclair QL microcomputer.
|  68K/OS EPROM expansion card | |
| Developer | GST Computer Systems | 
|---|---|
| OS family | Disk operating systems | 
| Working state | Discontinued | 
| Source model | Closed source | 
| Initial release | 1984 | 
| Platforms | Sinclair QL microcomputer | 
| Default user interface | Command-line interface or menu | 
It was commissioned by Sinclair Research in February 1983. However, after the official launch of the QL in January 1984, 68K/OS was rejected, and production QLs shipped with Sinclair's own Qdos operating system.[1]
GST later released 68K/OS as an alternative to Qdos, in the form of an EPROM expansion card,[2] and also planned to use it on single-board computers based on the QL's hardware.[1]
The operating system was developed by Chris Scheybeler,[3] Tim Ward,[2] Howard Chalkley and others.
The few ROM cards that were made mean that surviving examples now fetch a high price: On Feb 04, 2010 one sold for £310 on eBay.[4]
References
    
- Leon Heller (September 1984). "QL Affairs = Operating with a difference". Your Spectrum. No. 7. Retrieved 2009-03-26.
-  Graham, Adrian. "Sinclair QL". Binary Dinosaurs. Retrieved 2009-03-26. It was my mate Tim Ward who wrote the alternative O/S - 68K/OS. 
-  "QDOS under fire". Personal Computer News. No. 77. 8 September 1984. p. 3. [...] said Chris Scheybeler, who is in charge of the 68K/OS project [...] 
- Ebay. "Sinclair QL - GST 68k/OS 68kos VERY RARE!!". Retrieved 2009-02-05.
- "SinclairWatch". Your Spectrum. No. 8. October 1984. Retrieved 2009-03-26.
External links
    
    
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