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Right, first off, I'm from the '00s so although I never got to use {MS,PC}-DOS, I do know what they are, as well as being able to have used Windows 98 SE for a bit when I was younger.

So what I want to know is why does Windows use drive C: for the OS drive, more so, why does DOS do the same? Why not use something like X: (which I can say for a fact that the Windows 7+ install media does for the RAMDisk it creates)?

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  • Possible, but not quite. I'm asking as to why the OS drive is positioned where it is, and not at a random place on the drive letter alphabet
    – td512
    Feb 27, 2016 at 9:19
  • system drive is C: because A: and B: was used for floppy disks, and that was answered in the other question
    – phuclv
    Feb 27, 2016 at 10:24

1 Answer 1

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Way back when, most DOS computers had floppy drives. The first floppy drive was A: and the second floppy drive was B:. Because -- although floppies were absurdly small by today's standards -- some types of floppies were large enough that they couldn't be copied in a single pass through memory (copy original to memory, remove original, insert new, copy memory to new). To make copying a less tedious operation, it was very common to have two floppy drives, so A: and B: were reserved.

When hard drives started to become common, most machines still had at least one floppy, and a great deal of software assumed that both A: and B: were floppies. So, the first hard drive was assigned the name C: to avoid breaking the floppy custom.

Over the years that floppies remained common on machines that also had hard drives, the standard of C: as the first hard drive developed into a widely assumed rule, to the point that even after floppies became uncommon (and now obsolete), C: stuck as the assumed first hard drive.

Just to make things confusing, however, SSDs have started to replace hard drives as the C: drive -- and some software fails to respect that a lot of users prefer that really large installations to go on their hard drive (D:, for example) rather than their SSD.

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