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The Doors DOS Desktop Operating System By Anthony Fitzhugh Perpetual (C)Copyright and (P)Patent by Anthony J.

Fejfar and Neothomism P.C. (PA) and The People of God and The American People and The People of the Earth and Universe as a Perpetual Public Domain Copyrght and Patent. This is the design for a DOS Desktop for a Computer. When you start the Computer, after the Computer has booted up the Desktop Program from the Hard Drive, what is displayed on the Computer Screen is the DOS Desktop. On the DOS Desktop, the Computer Hardware and Software produces a screen on the display montior tv screen an image which corresponds to the computer hardware-software interface. The DOS Desktop is organized so that across the top of the screen are the letters A B C D E F, which are spaced out proportionarely, and then,

on the side of the screen are the numbers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 etc., such that a grid is formed with the letters across the tope and the numbers down the side. Thus, the screen is sectored into boxes which are labeled according to the grid frame. Thus, the upper left box is 1-A, while the next box to the right is 1-B, while the box down from the first box is 2A, and so on and so forth. Each box is linked to a program slot for computer software programs which are then labeled on the respective desktop box. Thus, box !-A might be the Word Proce3ssor Program such as Word Perfect. To access that program from the DOS Desktop the computer operator must enter the code 1-A with the keyboard and then press the Enter key. Instead of an External pointer, the next stope would be to use cursor arrows which can move a pointer from box to box. When the pointer is the wanted box, the operator then hits the Enter key. This design is halfway between DOS programming and

Windows Programming. This operating system is called Doors.

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