My name is Robert J. Sawyer. I'm a Hugo and Nebula Award-winning Canadian science-fiction writer. All twenty-five of my novels were written with WordStar, the best word-processing program the world has ever known.
<https://sfwriter.com/wordstar.htm>
<https://sfwriter.com/wordstar.htm>
WordStar was first introduced in 1978 and the final release--WordStar for DO 7.0 Rev. D--came out in December 1992. The program has never been updated since, and the company that made it has been defunct for decades; the progra is abandonware.
There's a lot to be said for undistracted writing - open up a full screen DOS window and Just Start Typing. You've got no Wikipedia rabbit holes to go down, no web to browse when you're stuck for an idea, and no email to distract.
My name is Robert J. Sawyer. I'm a Hugo and Nebula Award-winning Canadian science-fiction writer. All twenty-five of my novels were written with WordStar, the best word-processing program the world has ever known.
<https://sfwriter.com/wordstar.htm>
WordStar was first introduced in 1978 and the final release--WordStar for DOS 7.0 Rev. D--came out in December 1992. The program has never been updated since, and the company that made it has been defunct for decades; the program is abandonware.
But I still use it, and George R.R. Martin uses an earlier version. There has never--until now--been a complete online archive of the final version of the program along with all its manuals. Here it is:
Click to download the complete WordStar 7.0 archive
<https://sfwriter.com/sawyer-wordstar-7-archive.zip>
I spent weeks putting all this together. The archive contains not just the WordStar program but also extensive resources on how to use it, in additio to fully text-searchable PDFs of the original manuals, totaling over 1,000 pages, scanned from my own copies.
Since MS-DOS programs, such as WordStar, can't run under modern operating systems without using an MS-DOS emulator, I've provided two complete plug-and-play packages for running WordStar under Windows, one using DOSBox-X, an emulator that's still actively developed and maintained, and another using vDosPlus, which still works wonderfully but is no longer maintained.
I spent weeks putting all this together. The archive contains not just the WordStar program but also extensive resources on how to use it, in addition to fully text-searchable PDFs of the original manuals, totaling over 1,000 pages, scanned from my own copies.