These are 360K images of the diskettes that come with an AT&T PC 6300
WGS; they are MS-DOS 3.30 with some enhancements specifically for the
AT&T PC 6300 and 6300 WGS, such as date/time getting/setting the
built-in clock.

The diskettes are:

atdos331.360: MS-DOS Startup Diskette
atdos332.360: MS-DOS Operating Diskette
atdos333.360: MS-DOS Supplimental and Installation Diskette
atdos334.360: MS-DOS AT&T Help Diskette

The full labels are:

MS-DOS Startup Diskette
-----------------------
System/Programming Series
Software is licensed by AT&T for use only under the terms of the Limited
Use Software License enclosed.
(C) 1988 AT&T
(C) 1981-1987 Microsoft Corp.
-----------------------------
1021017-MC06-6700-X  Ver 3.30a  Rel 1.01  1 of 4


MS-DOS Operating Diskette
-----------------------
System/Programming Series
Software is licensed by AT&T for use only under the terms of the Limited
Use Software License enclosed.
(C) 1988 AT&T
(C) 1981-1987 Microsoft Corp.
-----------------------------
1021017-MC06         Ver 3.30a  Rel 1.01  2 of 4


MS-DOS Supplimental and Installation Diskette
-----------------------
System/Programming Series
Software is licensed by AT&T for use only under the terms of the Limited
Use Software License enclosed.
(C) 1988 AT&T
(C) 1981-1987 Microsoft Corp.
-----------------------------
1021017-MC06         Ver 3.30a  Rel 1.01  3 of 4


MS-DOS AT&T Help Diskette
-----------------------
System/Programming Series
Software is licensed by AT&T for use only under the terms of the Limited
Use Software License enclosed.
(C) 1988 AT&T
(C) 1981-1987 Microsoft Corp.
-----------------------------
1021017-MC06         Ver 3.30a  Rel 1.01  4 of 4


Notes on rebuilding an AT&T PC 6300/WGS computer:  Boot the Supplimental
and Installation Diskette and type INSTLDOS and follow the prompts.  All
four diskettes will copied and some autoexec.bat changes will be made.
You can do this even if the hard drive hasn't been partitioned (fdisk is
called as part of the installation).

Notes on the built-in clock:  The built-in clock is not Y2K compliant;
in fact, it is not even Y1992 compliant :) since the register for a year
is 3 bits wide, limiting the date from Jan 1984 to Dec. 1991.  However,
the *operating system* is Y2K compliant; you can enter a date of
7-23-2008 and the system will operate just fine, although on reboot the
date will be 7-23-1984 if pulled from the clock again.

trixter@oldskool.org, 20080724
