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Make sure everyone feels safe. Bullying of any kind isn't allowed,
and degrading comments about things like race, religi
The issue is memory-mapped hardware. Any hardware that exposes configuration
resisters or data buffers on the main address bus ends up taking a block of
physical address space that could be used by RAM. If your CPU, motherboard,
and/or OS can't deal with physical addresses wider than 32 bits, th
Reminds me of my last XP machine, supposedly, XP could handle up to 4GB
of ram, but when I installed 4GB in my machine, XP only saw 3.5GB. No
idea why, I never did find out what the technical reason was, but it was
a commonly known problem, since almost everywhere I tried to get the ram
from f
On 12/31/2021 11:50 AM, Liam Proven wrote:
On Fri, 31 Dec 2021 at 08:37, Thomas Mueller wrote:
I remember OS/2 2.x and Warp could run emulated DOS and could also boot and run
a specific DOS, but with limitations.
I actually had a copy of OS/2 1.33 Extended edition. If I recall
correctly,
> At that point, the system wants to create a page file that is larger (by
> default) than the 2GB fixed file size limit of FAT16/32.
FAT has a limit of 4GB.
it's DOS that limits this unless you indicate at DosOpen that you understand
the difference between signed and unsigned (2GB and 4GB) off
On 12/31/2021 8:14 AM, Liam Proven wrote:
On Thu, 30 Dec 2021 at 21:04, Deposite Pirate wrote:
Windows XP can indeed officially be installed and boot from FAT32.
https://kb.iu.edu/d/ajqm
AFAICS that page is inconclusive and merely says that XP supports
FAT16, 32 and NTFS, which was never in d
Liam Proven said about MicroWeb:
| Limitations
|
| HTTP only (no HTTPS support)
| No CSS or Javascript
| Very long pages may be truncated if
| there is not enough RAM available
Then DOSLynx
http://www.fdisk.com/doslynx/doslynx.htm
is probably more useful.
_
On Fri, 31 Dec 2021 17:14:10 +0100
Liam Proven wrote:
> FWIW, I always used to have a DOS boot partition (C:) and put Windows
> on D: back in the XP days. It was useful to have the ability to
> dual-boot DOS for BIOS reflashing and occasionally for emergency data
> recovery. I made the partition b
https://github.com/jhhoward/MicroWeb
«
MicroWeb is a web browser for DOS! It is a 16-bit real mode
application, designed to run on minimal hardware.
Minimum requirements
To run you will need:
Intel 8088 or compatible CPU
CGA, EGA, VGA or Hercules compatible graphics card
A network interface (it
On Fri, 31 Dec 2021 at 08:37, Thomas Mueller wrote:
>
> I remember OS/2 2.x and Warp could run emulated DOS and could also boot and
> run a specific DOS, but with limitations.
>
> I ran OS/2 from 1.3 to Warp 4 Fixpack 12 until it crashed and destroyed most
> hard drive data sometime during the s
On Fri, 31 Dec 2021 at 01:46, Deposite Pirate wrote:
>
> Windows NT was designed to work with FAT. Windows NT 4
... and the 3 earlier versions...
> always
> first formats the install partition as a FAT16 filesystem and then if
> you selected NTFS at install, it converts the FAT16 file system onl
On Fri, 31 Dec 2021 at 00:02, Jon Brase wrote:
>
> NTVDM exists and runs a stripped down version of MS-DOS 5. I think it even
> does have non-stripped versions of the relevant files available if the user
> decides to sys a floppy. But I've never heard of it being possible to run
> anything but
On Thu, 30 Dec 2021 at 21:04, Deposite Pirate wrote:
>
> Windows XP can indeed officially be installed and boot from FAT32.
>
> https://kb.iu.edu/d/ajqm
AFAICS that page is inconclusive and merely says that XP supports
FAT16, 32 and NTFS, which was never in doubt. But I checked and you're
right.
Hi,
> On Jun 13, 2021, at 10:38 AM, Rafael Angel Campos Vargas
> wrote:
>
> Two new free 2020 games of mine with Freedos version (freepascal without
> sound for now, i am working on it but it is complicated). Both of them are
> some simple.
>
> Aventura trivial only have spanish version
> h
Hi Thomas:
OS/2 2.x and Warp could boot DOS from a floppy, but I don't think even
they could run it from a disk partition.
I used OS/2 Warp 4. Being delighted by the speech-recognition interface!
I ran OS/2 from 1.3 to Warp 4 Fixpack 12 until it crashed and destroyed most
hard drive data so
Thomas Mueller composed on 2021-12-31 07:37 (UTC):
> Now I see no advantage in OS/2's successors (eComStation, ArcaOS) compared to
> choosing between FreeBSD, NetBSD, Linux and Haiku which have the advantage of
> being open-source.
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