never mind. the web site got updated since the last time I looked.
From: Jim Michaels
To: freedos development
Sent: Thu, May 13, 2010 10:24:24 PM
Subject: [Freedos-devel] different sources - where to get individual official
freedos files?
I am confused - a
I am confused - and so, apparently is the maintainer of the freedos web site.
...as to where to go to get the freedos files, because apparently there are
several places from what I have seen.
so... does anyone know for sure where they are supposed to come from so I can
make a good OEM build?
and
On Fri, May 14, 2010 at 1:43 AM, Jim Michaels wrote:
>
> I did more research I and I heard some rumblings about windows 7's "Windows
> XP Mode".
> it turns out it's a Windows Virtual PC that emulates XP yet provides access
> to your devices. I don't know what kind of filesystem access it provides
I did more research I and I heard some rumblings about windows 7's "Windows XP
Mode".
it turns out it's a Windows Virtual PC that emulates XP yet provides access to
your devices. I don't know what kind of filesystem access it provides.
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/virtual-pc/support/faq.asp
Em 13-05-2010 20:04, Eric Auer escreveu:
>> Probavly the easy way to instal is with www.netbootdisk.com
>
> How does it differ from the NwDsk by Erwin Veermans?
> http://www.veder.com/nwdsk/index.html Which disk is
> better for which purpose, and why? Can you give some
> more details about both? T
On Fri, May 14, 2010 at 12:15 AM, Eric Auer wrote:
> Does Windows 7 have the ability to run DOS apps?
The 32-bit editions do. The 64-bit editions do not.
> XP did.
Only the 32-bit edition.
No 64-bit version of Windows runs 16-bit apps. The NTVDM is gone and
WOW16 which thunked Win16 API calls
Hi Jim,
> I have a problem. the only OS microsoft offers now is windows 7.
> machines from HP only have drivers for windows 7. I want XP. so I
> am up a creek without a paddle trying to do dos development and
> needing a newer intel machine with more cores (4 or 6).
Does Windows 7 have the ab
Hi Alain,
> I know thar Qemu used to work great, and it is actively developed. It
> will give you a nice emulated machine with a NIC emulation. VirtualBox
> should work too, and should be much more easy. Both have nice vesa graphics.
>
> Neither will give you shared folders, you will have to u
Any GPL software can be used for business. No exeptions and restrictions
apply only to redistribution of modified versions.
I know that Qemu runs fine under under XP, it might be very interesting
if that folder sharing thing worked fine :)
VirtualBox runs 100% on any windows. Surely VboxOse com
On Thu, May 13, 2010 at 6:25 PM, Jim Michaels wrote:
> can you point me to an emulator that has windows binaries that can be used
> by a business person for more than personal use
>
> virtualbox isn't going to do it
Why not? It works just fine on Windows, I've used it.
> especially since the GPL
Op 13-5-2010 19:25, Jim Michaels schreef:
can you point me to an emulator that has windows binaries that can be
used by a business person for more than personal use
Let's see ( I don't know the licenses of all):
* VMware (Workstation, Server, Player, etc)
* Bochs
* QEMu
* VirtualBox
* VirtualPC
can you point me to an emulator that has windows binaries that can be used by a
business person for more than personal use
virtualbox isn't going to do it, especially since the GPL better-licensed Open
Source Edition isn't made to compile under windows. oracle - sigh.
yes, I am trying to use le
Hi,
> I know thar Qemu used to work grat, and it is actively developed. It
> will give you a nice emulated machine with a NIC emulation.
> VirtualBox
> should work too, and should be much more easy. Both have nice vesa
> graphics.
>
> Neither will give you shared folders, you will have to use
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