FreeDOS Is 20 Years Old
Jim Hall (2985) writes "In a June 29, 1994 post in comp.os.msdos.apps on USENET, a physics student announced an effort to create a completely free version of DOS that everyone could use. That project turned into FreeDOS, 20 years ago! Originally intended as a free replacement for MS-DOS, FreeDOS has since advanced what DOS could do, adding new functionality and making DOS easier to use. And today in 2014, people continue to use FreeDOS to support embedded systems, to run business software, and to play classic DOS games!"
LHX Attack Chopper
I wonder if FreeDOS can run in virtual machine. Oh Google...
Let's make like a bird... and get the flock outta here.
To add to the summary, FreeDOS is probably the 3rd or 4th most popular preinstalled OS for laptops, behind Windows and Mac OSX and maybe Chrome OS, but certainly higher than Ubuntu or any other desktop Linux. My HP laptop came with some version of FreeDOS that I since wiped off the disk. Installing FreeDOS gives OEMs the chance to have a nominally functional unit that can be tested for obvious hardware defects while not restricting the eventual user to their choice of a non-Windows OS.
Back when I processed computers to go to surplus I would DBAN the hard drives and install FreeDOS so that the guys at Surplus could show the customers that the computers would actually boot.
Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
Have you tried a browser extension that changes the user agent string?
One User-agent switcher worked on one site! Thanks a lot but on another one, the message I get is this:
To access this site your Internet Explorer parser must be MSXML 3.0 or greater. Please use Internet Explorer version 6.0 (and higher) or download the correct parser version in order to properly view the web pages located within. Current parser is not MSXML 3.0 or greater.
Thanks!
Now i feel old. I was there in the beginning.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Can't you just change your browser's user agent string to identify as a MS desktop IE version?
Or does it require some plug in or something?
With Commander Keen in my right screen, FreeDOS has hit me right in the childhood :) heres to another 20 YEARS!
Good people go to bed earlier.
Thanks for your contribution to the world, Jim! Makes me want to look for Scorched Earth now.
There have been several times that FreeDOS has saved the day for installing BIOS updates on older(-ish) Dell servers and whatnot.
... FreeWinXP. I'm sure it'll be out any day now.
SpinRite, ( https://www.grc.com/spinrite.htm ) Steve Gibson's longstanding hard drive maintenance and recovery utility also uses FreeDos to boot. This means that it can work on all parts of the drive.
5 years ago I was given an old HP Vectra workstation (256k Ppro 180 upgraded to a 1MB Ppro 200 with water cooling), removed both Matrox Video cards, slapped in a Soundblaster PRO 2.0, an Ensoniq Soundscape Elite, a Voodoo Rush, and after upgrading the machine to 192MB RAM, installed Win 98SE. DooM sounds amazing, Tie Fighter never sounded better. OS/2 Warp 3.0, DOS 6.22, win 3.11 and 98SE.
For the really big games (Xwing Alliance/UT/Quake2), P3/800 , dual Voodoo2 in SLI, SB Live!. 513MB and 98SE with a Rage 128 Pro card. Those machines sit along my C64 and my PS/2 286 (and my 512k MAC)
I have an old VLB 486 with an overclocked amd 5x86 running at 160 (32MB RAM), that one I'v got to give FreeDOS a try :)
I've got better things to do tonight than die.
You have got Wine, and commercial ports of it like CrossOver. They are not production ready, however they do run some binaries to some extent. The compatibility list is huge. However one thing is to emulate the APIs and bugs of DOS (much smaller fingerprint), and other to do the same to XP. Even Microsoft cant do it right.
As the world moves on to 64-bit OSes, and with Microsoft removing XP Mode from Windows 8, we need some contribution from the open source community.
Well, take the proper responsibility and contribute yourself. I think open source is cool, but not when it is perceived as the magical software fountain which generates free programs while I just fiddle my thumbs. What you asked is a reverse engineered Windows to play old games. That would require extreme amounts of work. Are you willing to help by contributing code or giving donations?
Amazing game in all ways
The Opera browser has a setting to impersonate Internet Exploder for certain pages. Works fine.