I installed Freedos at home, amazingly, without
messing up my PC. I had an NTFS partition (without
Windows) that had to be converted to FAT32 (it took
more than an hour, the rest went smoothly).
Now Ubuntu GRUB loads all the OSes, including
Freedos. It was easy to put programs onto the Freedos
Hi. I just grabbed the latest version of Grub4dos to look at it. You
need to distribute source code for this, at the same time you release
the binary. You acknowledge that Grub4dos is a fork of Grub, so must
follow the GNU GPL. But you do not abide by it here.
Section 3 of the GNU GPL (see "COPYIN
> Sorry if my posting was a bit confusing so you thought that I am a
> grub4dos developer.
>
> To clarify this:
> I am not a grub4dos developer as in 20.05.2008.
> I am only satisfied end user and also have no privilege contact with them.
>
> If you want the grub4dos developers to know that please
Hey Jim!
Jim Hall schrieb:
> Hi. I just grabbed the latest version of Grub4dos to look at it. You
> need to distribute source code for this, at the same time you release
> the binary. You acknowledge that Grub4dos is a fork of Grub, so must
> follow the GNU GPL. But you do not abide by it here.
>
On Tue, May 20, 2008 at 12:14 PM, Florian Xaver <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I would buy a OLPC XO if it would support FreeDOS... ;-))
I hate it when people say that ;-)
I'm not going to sell you mine, but once the DOS support is into a
released firmware load, I'll definitely post a note here
Hi Richard,
not sure whether a dos extender with 4gb flat memory segments
is useful... I mean there already are dpmione and hdpmi which
have quite some punch and even dos32a and cwsdpmi are not bad.
About your 386/AT disk - good old AT probably is still the same
as (parallel) ATA / IDE today, so
I would buy a OLPC XO if it would support FreeDOS... ;-))
Bye
Flo
2008/5/17 Steve Holton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Greetings all-
>
> I was wondering if there were any interest in seeing Free DOS running
> on the OLPC XO?
>
> For background, the OLPC has under development a version of Open
> Firmwa
Hi you lot
About 15 years ago I wrote but did not get to quite assemble a dos extender to
support 4GB
segments with a 386 compiler that supported the the old (RIP) MS-DOS but
generated segment
selectors,instead of addresses's,ie a "flat memory model", switching at the
MS-DOS API.
Windows came
Michael Reichenbach schrieb:
> Eric asked me to post some advertisements for grub4dos.
>
> If you are interested in multi booting I bet you know gnu grub 1.x, also
> known as grub legacy. Grub legacy will be no longer developed by the gnu
> grub project. Them are now working on grub2 and they
I would like to see programs written to work with GEM directly.
Updating
FDPKG to work through GEM would be really neat. GEM is beautifully
simple.
I don't know about turbovision etcetera, but how hard would it be to
build
the installer on top of opengem? Talk of needing a dos extender gui to
pla
Is it still stalled for the forseeable future?
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someone wrote:
> I would like to see programs written to work with GEM directly. Updating
> FDPKG to work through GEM would be really neat. GEM is beautifully simple.
> I don't know about turbovision etcetera, but how hard would it be to build
> the installer on top of opengem?
There is a scri
I am seeing if my mail server is fixed...
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Defy
I would like to see programs written to work with GEM directly. Updating
FDPKG to work through GEM would be really neat. GEM is beautifully simple.
I don't know about turbovision etcetera, but how hard would it be to build
the installer on top of opengem? Talk of needing a dos extender gui to
pl
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