On 01/04/2013 04:13 AM, dmccunney wrote:
> ...
> "Real time" simply means "guaranteed to respond to an external event
> within a specified period". What time period is required?
>
I have been able to guarantee millisecond resolution of events to
measure the subtle effects on human performance of
On Thu, Jan 3, 2013 at 7:08 PM, wiwa64 wrote:
> The new utility INLINE allows to place multi-line data, that is to be
> fed as input into another program via stdin, directly within the
> batchfile from which the program is invoked. Users who are familiar with
> shell programming under UNIX, might
It's the clock, just the clock. It's a square wave usually, the old up and
down. Pin 19, CLK, on the Intel 8086 DIP
When emulating the speed of a 8088, 8086, 80286,... CPUs you need to
emulate the Clock cycles
-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_...etc...
So sticking in NOPs may not work.
I just want to inform the few braves who still use (or even work with)
any flavor of DOS, that i just released a new version of my DOSUTILS
package. I added a new utility to the package and two others were improved.
The new utility INLINE allows to place multi-line data, that is to be
fed as in
There should also be made a distinction between real time input and real
time output and servo loop. If you are capturing timing events you really
only need to respond to an event and store a time for later processing. I
usually use a microcontroller and write a routine around its interrupts so
tha
Thank you for the responses. Unfortunately, since I have no way to load a
driver because of the DVD ROM not working, I guess I am back at square one.
That's OK. I guess I could run FreeDOS ın virtualBOX on LINUX.
On Fri, Jan 4, 2013 at 12:20 AM, Ralf A. Quint wrote:
> At 02:14 PM 1/3/2013, Tu
At 02:14 PM 1/3/2013, TuLithu wrote:
>Last night I installed FreeDOS on my HP Pavilion g series laptop. Everything
>seems to work fine, except I can't access my DVD ROM drive. I have spent
>several hours reading the help files and examining the config.sys and
>autoexec.bat files, but I can't fig
You need a cd/DVD rom driver that supports your drive
Installed in config.sys
If you want I can send you some drivers for highspeed driver
Let me know..
-Chris
Http://digitalatoll.com
On Thursday, January 3, 2013, TuLithu wrote:
>
> Last night I installed FreeDOS on my HP Pavilion g series lap
Last night I installed FreeDOS on my HP Pavilion g series laptop. Everything
seems to work fine, except I can't access my DVD ROM drive. I have spent
several hours reading the help files and examining the config.sys and
autoexec.bat files, but I can't figure out what the problem is.
I figured t
On Thu, Jan 3, 2013 at 4:20 AM, Jim Lemon wrote:
> On 01/03/2013 12:57 PM, dmccunney wrote:
>> On Wed, Jan 2, 2013 at 7:57 PM, Jim Lemon wrote:
>>
>>> If there was a Linux kernel in which the user could turn off everything that
>>> isn't in DOS, that would be a way out.
>>
>> If you could turn of
P.S. Starting from here of course
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FreeDOS#Memory_management
--
Master Visual Studio, SharePoint, SQL, ASP.NET, C# 2012, HTML5, CSS,
MVC, Windows 8 Apps, JavaScript and much more. Keep your skil
Hi,
On Thu, Jan 3, 2013 at 2:07 AM, Michael Robinson
wrote:
>
> Dos makes sense for 8/16 bit computers that can't handle multitasking
> very well.
[MS-based] "DOS" is exclusively 16-bit, it won't work on 8-bit at all
(at least not in "traditional" sense or any reasonable variant that I
know of).
Actually I use DOS because I use an antique office package "Open Access
IV". It works for me, does it's job very nicely and has survived nearly 25
years without a virus etc. I can write a program using the word processor,
database and language calls in a quarter of the time it would take on other
p
On 01/03/2013 12:57 PM, dmccunney wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 2, 2013 at 7:57 PM, Jim Lemon wrote:
>
>> If there was a Linux kernel in which the user could turn off everything that
>> isn't in DOS, that would be a way out.
>
> If you could turn off everything that *isn't* in DOS, you might have
> fun run
Dos makes sense for 8/16 bit computers that can't handle multitasking
very well. There are plenty of 8/16 bit computers around still, think
e-readers probably and other embedded devices that don't need the
higher functionality a 32/64 bit machine/multi core machine offers.
Dos was a quick and d
15 matches
Mail list logo