Because most of the assemblers and compilers we use today run on these operating systems, so how were these OS's made in the first place?

That's just silly, Intel introducing their new architecture to the market would of most definitely distributed documentation and "cross-assemblers"...Zacariaz wrote:as far as i know the first version of dos was hardcoded, with all the binary instryctions and so on. Its a tough job, but its definently possible...
In a time when a machine with 4k of memory was scarce and very expensive to buy ($100.000's) this was a fair statement (not good, just fair). In the time when a machine with half a gigabyte of memory is going for $250, that's plain stupid.JamesM wrote:There was a quote from Von Neumann that went something like (on the subject of assemblers):
Apparently, the trend at the time was to write the program in assembly, then get grad students to handcraft it into opcodes!Wasting precious scientific resources on such petty tasks is a crime
JamesM