How can a .jar be run on Android or iOS? Android is built on some bastardized
version of JAVA but AFAIK nobody has yet produced a fully functional JAVA
Runtime Environment (JRE) for Android.
As for iOS, Apple seems to hate JAVA with as much fury as they do Flash.
Apple sayeth "#%#@ Flash and JA
What hardware? That of course needs an 80386 or newer CPU.
Another thing is any drivers loaded in config.sys and autoexec.bat have to be
compatible with 386 enhanced mode. The OAK CD-ROM driver and later MS-DOS
MSCDEX should be compatible. IIRC old sound card drivers were pretty bad about
being
It was partitioned, with an MBR, accessible to Windows when connected to a USB
to IDE adapter.
Currently it's bootable to a DOS prompt. I used the "China DOS Union" DOS 7.1
boot floppy with a USB floppy drive to fdisk and format the DOM installed in
the thin client. I could go ahead and put th
I'm going to try using RMPrepUSB to put the FreeDOS USB install image onto a
USB stick. Why? Because it's supposed to be able to be selected to emulate an
A: floppy drive (or as C: or D:) instead of presenting itself as C: like the
FreeDOS image does. Recall that the FreeDOS installer initially
If a way could be found to replace ThinOS on various models of WYSE thin
clients, they'd be ideal platforms for an embedded DOS. ThinOS usually shares
space in an extra large BIOS chip.
Installing it might involve a bit of hacking to make the OS installer creator
utility setup a USB flash drive
I used CloneDisk to rip a RAW image of the booting DOM with FreeDOS. Mounted
that with Qemu. Booted Qemu with the FreeDOS install image and installed
FreeDOS to the image copied from the DOM. Then I used CloneDisk to write that
image back to the DOM. "Missing Operating System".
On Friday,
I found an "MS-DOS 7.1" boot floppy image and *this one* had no problems
booting the S30 with a USB floppy drive, wiping the DOM and creating a fresh
partition with FDISK, then rebooting and using format c: /s
NOW it's booted to a DOS prompt from the DOM.
So I'll try FreeDOS again..
Nope. Sam
day, January 4, 2018, 6:51:48 PM MST, Rugxulo
wrote:
Hi,
On Thu, Jan 4, 2018 at 6:36 PM, Gregg Eshelman via Freedos-user
wrote:
>
> The workaround at the bottom of this page will have to be implemented in
> FreeDOS in order to install it from USB.
Writing to MSRs? Do you really
I just tried installing FreeDOS 1.2 Lite from a 512 meg USB drive onto a WYSE
S30. Result? Failure.
It boots and launches the setup. First is says there's no fixed disk, then is
says drive D: is not partitioned. So I have it partition and reboot.
Repeats this exactly the same. The BIOS *does* pre
The CNC control software has to have EMS. Without it, it can't use any more
than low memory. It's *old* software, capable of running on a 1981 vintage 5150
IBM PC. So I would assume it knows nothing of newer EMS types with their fancy
features. If only Light Machines, then Intelitek, had bothere
Here's the FreeDOS image. Volume label is FREEDOS2012. Will mount in Quemu as a
RAW image. Can't relocate the site I downloaded it
from.https://anonfile.com/J8sau4d4bc/FreeDOS.rar
The storage is an IDE Flash Disk, AKA Disk On Module. It has a 44 pin female
header connector, same electrical inte
I'm attempting to get some DOS onto a WYSE Sx0 thin client. The problem is
right after the OS starts to load from the IDE flash module, the BIOS steps in
and hides the IDE controller. So it comes up missing operating system.
Boot from USB and it's there. I have a FreeDOS image for a 64 megabyte m
No problem if you know the full path and file name. If you have ATTRIB you can
hit it with -H to make it visible.
https://www.computerhope.com/attribhl.htm
On Saturday, December 2, 2017, 11:56:07 AM MST, Karen Lewellen
wrote:
Hi folks,
its complicated. However, is there a way to copy
What do these "Jack's Drivers" actually do?
On Friday, November 17, 2017, 1:59:11 AM MST, Eric Auer
wrote:
Hi Rugxulo,
you are not going to make Jack any more kind by publicly
sharing all private email details of your private fight...
Jack does update drivers because he is a perfect
512 meg? Luxury! My first hard drive was FIVE megabytes. A full height 5.25"
MFM made by Tandon. I installed MS-DOS (3.1 IIRC) and all the software I had,
mostly games. It was *half full*! Then I backed it up, onto 360K floppies. By
the time I put the last disk on the stack, I was thinking "Neve
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