Elliott Gamson of Immaculate Matching (New York) developed a system using MS-DOS.
In 1989, Mindscape ported it to the Commodore Amiga and personal computers that use MS-DOS.
Henter-Joyce produced JAWS, a screen reader for personal computers using MS-DOS, and later Microsoft Windows.
Windows requires using MS-DOS, an operating system that dates to the early 1980's and was designed for the first generation of IBM-PCs.
Typical is the "Quick and Easy Guide to Using MS-DOS."
This is an absolute must for beginners as Dos Quiz provides a safe environment in which to practice using MS-DOS.
However Safe Mode uses MS-DOS real mode disk drivers instead.
After initially using CP/M-86 it quickly switched to using generic MS-DOS 2.00.
They used MS-DOS the way Microsoft had originally envisioned: in the same way as 8-bits systems used CP/M.
GEMDOS disc file systems can be read using MS-DOS or MS-Windows 95.