There is no need for sound, I don't think I even need a network connection.
I'm looking to get a system that is at least 3-4 years old, maybe even older.
The only reason to get a newer one is to get some extra speed.
This clown speaks for himself
> On Feb 3, 2016, at 1:33 PM, Corbin Davenport
I would think FreeDOS would work fine on any PC with legacy boot enabled,
but extra stuff like USB, sound, and/or networking might need extra drivers
that might not be available.
Corbin
On Feb 3, 2016 12:57 PM, "Wayne Dernoncourt" wrote:
> I'm planning to install Free-DOS on a standalone system
I'm planning to install Free-DOS on a standalone system to run SpinRite. I've
had issues in getting FreeDOS to boot successfully on some systems (the systems
seems to hang on Init...)
So I decided to get an older desktop with a plan to wipeout what I expect will
be Windows and install FreeDOS.