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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!"

90 of 133 comments (clear)

  1. Best DOS game... by bswarm · · Score: 1

    LHX Attack Chopper

    1. Re:Best DOS game... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You forgot Quake, you insensitive clod.

    2. Re:Best DOS game... by Sowelu · · Score: 1

      Just rediscovered Alien Legacy, a true Sierra golden age underdog from 1994. It's a space colonization game that's not a 4X, how novel!

      I really really wish I could find all those old DOS TSRs from the mid-late 80s. I had one that put a bunch of ascii smiley face characters on the dos prompt that careened around and bounced off of lines of text; hold ctrl or alt to make them go in circles. I would not be surprised if it was really, truly lost in time with no remaining copies.

    3. Re:Best DOS game... by iced_773 · · Score: 1

      Utopia: The Creation of a Nation. I've considered remaking it without the limits indicative of fixed-length arrays ("you cannot build more buildings at this time", etc.).

    4. Re:Best DOS game... by AaronLS · · Score: 1

      Surprised to see someone mention one of my favorites. One of the few games where even losing was fun. Took a hit to the oil line? Now you've gotta get back to friendly borders before you crash.

      I found the copter controls/weapons management to be a nice balance between complex and arcade. I also loved getting to pick my loadout for each mission. Was a fun game for a computer that had only 512Kb ram.

    5. Re:Best DOS game... by 0xdeaddead · · Score: 1

      That would be QuakeWorld for MS-DOS. Too bad it was born out of a bored and rainy day, but yeah, no more B&W non-existant TCP/IP or trying to rely on Windows95, No this version includes it's own TCP/IP stack, and best of all it works.

      QuakeWorld for MS-DOS, the way it should have been.

    6. Re:Best DOS game... by thebes · · Score: 1

      And Doom went to my little league games!

    7. Re:Best DOS game... by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      Disagree ...

      * Castle Adventure http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C...
      * Doom
      * Master of Magic http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M...
      * Master of Orion
      * Shamus https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
      * Sopwith (went open souce!) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S...
      * Sorched Earth
      * Zork

    8. Re:Best DOS game... by jshackney · · Score: 1

      Doom, that's awesome. That's pretty much when I started getting bored with games and the race for frame rates.

      That was a fun game, though. Flight sims were more my thing. I enjoyed the heck out of F-19 Stealth Fighter (yeah, C64) and FPS:Football. Wish I could find a working copy of the latter. Also, been looking for a flight sim I had purchased, but never got to install (would like to see what I missed) as hardware evolved too rapidly and backward compatibility was super sketchy at that time. Wish I could remember the name of that sim.

    9. Re:Best DOS game... by armanox · · Score: 1

      What, no Kings Quest? I remember playing them in DOS (up to KQ VI)

      Also, The Elder Scrolls: Arena and The Elder Scrolls II: Daggerfall....lost lots of time there.

      --
      I'm starting to think GNU is the problem with "GNU/Linux" these days.
    10. Re:Best DOS game... by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      gunship 2000 is a way better chopper game.

      besides, Star Control II. and frontier first encounters.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    11. Re:Best DOS game... by Narcocide · · Score: 1

      Falcon 4.0

    12. Re:Best DOS game... by sconeu · · Score: 1

      I seem to recall that someone did a FOSS port of KQ IV for Windows.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    13. Re:Best DOS game... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I'm gonna go with Comanche: Maximum Overkill. Flying the Comanche through voxelized canyons on ground effect with the Thrustmaster HOTAS was one of the great joys of the DOS gaming era.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    14. Re:Best DOS game... by jones_supa · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure about that...but KQ III did recently get a remake.

    15. Re:Best DOS game... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      As a game? I vaguely recall enjoying Doom on release more than Quake on release. I enjoyed Duke Nukem 3D a lot more than either. The thing that made Quake special wasn't the game, it was that it was an off-the-shelf game engine with a free SDK. All of the game-specific behaviour (including things like the flight paths of projectiles) was contained in a bytecode file that had the source and compiler provided. For a while, I had about 500MB of mods for Quake installed (the game itself was around 50MB). Doom had all of the game behaviour hard coded, so all that mods could do was change the visual appearance. People wrote rally games and flight simulators in the Quake engine as mods. There was nothing like QTank, AirQuake, Quake Horrorshow, or Quake Rally for Doom. There definitely wasn't anything like Team Fortress, which accounted for the majority of the time I spent playing Quake.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    16. Re:Best DOS game... by mt2mb4me · · Score: 1

      I like that one myself. Whenver I fire up dos box, I can help but spend 10 minutes playing alley cat.

    17. Re:Best DOS game... by mt2mb4me · · Score: 1

      Scorched Earth was epic in high school. That Links 386 and Street Rod http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S...

    18. Re:Best DOS game... by SQLGuru · · Score: 1

      Not the same as FPS, but try Professional Football Simulator. http://www.barcodegames.com/

    19. Re:Best DOS game... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Maybe you can find it here?

      https://archive.org/details/DO...

      Or perhaps up a step at the main archive?
      https://archive.org/search.php...

      (Argh, more old shit to download!! Must... resist...)

      AHA! Someone discovered the NS3 source!! Resistance is futile.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    20. Re:Best DOS game... by tarius8105 · · Score: 1

      Carrier Command

    21. Re:Best DOS game... by sillybilly · · Score: 1

      Telepathy and all that.. it's a great way for nonverbal communication..

    22. Re:Best DOS game... by sillybilly · · Score: 1

      By the way life is based on both a sort of ROM chip technology, called DNA, that mutates very slowly, and volatile RAM based technology, called the flu shot trainable immune system, and the volatile memory acquiring and forgetting brain. In the ROM area, the X chromosome, (the female being XX, the male being XY, and females almost never being colorblind because at least one of the X variation copies functions well) is critical, and contains all the basic functions of life, such as energy production, mitochondrial DNA and mutates extremely slowly, and successful variability in it has been carefully preserved in things like counting women as property and not killing them in a war but instead "looting them" and taking them with you (btw. a woman soldier with an Uzi or Kalashnikov or M16 is equalized to a male, and is not a noncombatant valuable property, or a "women and children first" above all property and male crew in importance "being," so her X chromosome variability will get X'd out pretty quickly.) The male is XY, and the wastable Y chromosome contains the brainpower and education, because mammalian human females get bogged down 9 months per offspring, and those that start at age 12 and 13 outcompete those that start at age 42 a few years before menopause in voting power (meaning all kinds of other power, mass presence power,) so a 12 year old female does not have the time to get a full college education in timewasting math and philosophy (she's still very good at psychology and english as mind control tools), instead she has to rely on the discardable 52 year old male Y chromosome who had another 40 years to get fully educated, to defend her, come up with new technology for her and think for her. A male reaches peak in sexlife at age 21, a female at age 30, but a female fully stops near age 45 (as she has to stick around with the baby, but a father is not necessary, or could be anywhere at the end of 9 months, let alone end of 20 years), while a male stays reproductive able til the end of his life (though there is a story of King David in the Bible, where in his old age they brought to him an absolutely gorgeous naked teenage girl, and he could no longer get it up anymore, even though he was very active in his youth (see this image http://th02.deviantart.net/fs7... )). Often the male is not available to help out raising the family, especially in a society where the divorce rate is over 50%. (So that leaves the female and the grandma on the mother's side of the family. Nobody cares about a child like his own mother and his grandma, and such separation was by far the greatest cruelty of the slavery in the US, and after the civil war the first thing people did was try to find old family members. Serfdom in medieval Europe did not separate families, even if the nobility landlords were free to enter the household and take 10% of everything they found as a military defense fee, and that included raping some of the female family members sometimes.) So the male is often not available. That is why the Pope sticks up for abstinence (yeah right, it's more like pretend-abstinence, as in don't openly discuss your masturbations with people you work with or your friends, and repress open social acceptance of sexual exuberance like gay/lesbian sex and marriage, even if it happens in the background, don't talk about it, especially not in a teletubby tinkie winkie is gay way, ma! what's gay mean?), monogamy (yeah, the father should stick around with one woman, unless he can keep his women from catfighting and living in the same larger households, like some men in Africa can pull it off, but monogamy is simpler, especially in an everyone is equal and equally broke way, polygamy is very expensive, see https://www.youtube.com/watch?...), and women should try to focus on being mothers from a young age, instead of higher education, and police and military service. That'

    23. Re:Best DOS game... by sillybilly · · Score: 1

      1971-1976 top of the chart sitcom, All in The Family:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

      Archie bunker and union jobs and stay at home moms are not possible in today's economy of minimum wage, when it takes 2x minimum wage to sustain a household, but two people, a monogamous working mother and husband, might have been able to pull it off, if they got lucky and never got sick. Also with the divorce rate sky high, women are forced to become career women, but they don't have to take crappy treatment from their men by being dependent on them, but the kids suffer, and you end up with less and less quality workforce, because they are raised by the media and not by their parents, or at least their local priests.

    24. Re:Best DOS game... by zwarte+piet · · Score: 1

      That sounds like an awsome game.

  2. Can I play Descent on it? by thechemic · · Score: 1

    I wonder if FreeDOS can run in virtual machine. Oh Google...

    --
    Let's make like a bird... and get the flock outta here.
    1. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by Unknown+Lamer · · Score: 1
      --

      HAL 7000, fewer features than the HAL 9000, but just as homicidal!
    2. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by Jim+Hall · · Score: 5, Informative

      I wonder if FreeDOS can run in virtual machine. Oh Google...

      Yes, you can run FreeDOS in a VM! I usually recommend installing FreeDOS in a VM, especially if you don't plan to commit that computer to FreeDOS full-time. For Windows, I think most people prefer QEMU or VMWare or VirtualPC. On my Linux laptop, I run DOSemu.

    3. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by The+MAZZTer · · Score: 1

      Descent is currently on Steam, I would be shocked if they did not bundle it with some mechanism for modern systems (probably DOSbox, as others have mentioned).

    4. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by Noah+Haders · · Score: 1

      What does google have to do with this?

    5. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by iggymanz · · Score: 2

      I use FreeDOS with grub in it to multi-boot thin clients that can only boot from a FAT formatted partition. funny some HP thin clients require that, others don't. I make "servers" out of thin clients, usually with OpenBSD

    6. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by tepples · · Score: 1

      Probably thechemic's perception that Google finds more relevant resources on how to get old DOS games working on modern PCs than Bing or Yandex/DDG does.

    7. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by arcctgx · · Score: 1

      Apart from nostalgia, what is the reason to play Descent in FreeDOS? Better options are available, like the GoG version or source ports such as DXX-Rebirth. And of course there's dosbox, which I bet is much easier to set up.

    8. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by thechemic · · Score: 1

      No reason at all. I'm definitely open to suggestions, and I'll check out your suggestion for sure!

      --
      Let's make like a bird... and get the flock outta here.
    9. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by fizzer06 · · Score: 1

      I have not been able to install FreeDOS in VMWare Player. Google has hits for instruction with regular VMWare. So far, I haven't found a ready made appliance.

    10. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by Noah+Haders · · Score: 1

      Probably thechemic's perception that Google finds more relevant resources on how to get old DOS games working on modern PCs than Bing or Yandex/DDG does.

      OIC. I thought he was asking Google Inc. to provide him a technical solution to his problem, like building in a Chrome extension or something.

    11. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Last time I tried, I had to use DosBox and FreeDos (or maybe DOS 6.22) on a VM to run Descent and the Devil level editor. The game would only run on one, and the level editor on the other. I can't recall which was which. I used a floppy image on a file to share data between the two. Pretty nostalgic going back and playing that old game.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    12. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by thechemic · · Score: 1

      Nostalgic for sure. I miss that and Command & Conquer. I just may use your tips here and give it a go.

      --
      Let's make like a bird... and get the flock outta here.
    13. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by catmistake · · Score: 1
    14. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by 0xdeaddead · · Score: 2

      I'm installing it right now... I chose the "Microsoft Windows" profile, and selected "Windows 3.1"... You need to make sure that the CD-ROM has the highest boot priority in the BIOS... (hammer F2 on reboots), eventually you'll catch it...

      the install is SLOW... no doubt about it.

      I also installed it on QEMU, and yeah terribly slow.

      With QEMU thought, I did get DOOM v1.1 with sound working, so that is nice!

    15. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by 0xdeaddead · · Score: 1

      Well... it installs, it's DOS4G/W (I'd forgotten!) and it'll run with all drivers disabled (I didn't test otherwise) ... Setup the sound card as a sound blaster

        Complete the Sound Blaster 16 Configuration.
        IRQ 5
        8-bit DMA 1
        16-bit DMA 7
        MPU-401 I/O address
        Disable (MPU-401 MIDI device is not supported)

      Once the game loads up the ship bounces around like crazy, and you get destroyed within seconds.. So, I'm guessing Descent doesn't handle fast machines, so while it 'works' it's not proper.. It'd probably better off in something like PCem, or just old fashioned DOSBox...

    16. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by Noah+Haders · · Score: 1

      i don't use chrome. it's like saying the orwellian telescreen is handy because its reflective surface doubles as a mirror.

    17. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      EA released Command and Conquer Gold as a free download a few years ago. That's the Windows 95 version using the Red Alert engine (so high-resolution 640x480 graphics!), but with the same game as the original. It ran quite nicely in WINE when I tried it (a long time go now, may need an old version as WINE doesn't monotonically improve, but according to the apps db it works fine and is rated 'gold', which seems appropriate...).

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    18. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by mlk · · Score: 1

      > virtual machine

      VM or emulator?

      How about an emulator running on the JavaScript Virtual Machine? You can do that. ;)

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
    19. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by mt2mb4me · · Score: 1

      I would bet, that is how they did Wolfenstein 3D

    20. Re:Can I play Descent on it? by zwarte+piet · · Score: 1

      MySql isn't half bad either.

  3. A popular laptop OS? by systemDead · · Score: 5, Informative

    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.

    1. Re:A popular laptop OS? by Jim+Hall · · Score: 5, Interesting

      FreeDOS gets used in several pre-built computers. HP is one example - HP EliteBook comes with a FreeDOS option. And Dell used to do this, don't know if they still do. There are a bunch of vendors (especially in Europe and Asia) that pre-install FreeDOS, too.

      Alas, these pre-built computers have FreeDOS on them mainly as a clever way to get around a licensing agreement with Microsoft. I understand that Microsoft put a term in their Windows OEM license that prohibits system builders from selling "naked" computers - systems without operating systems. If you want to get the huge discount on Windows OEM licenses, so you can sell pre-built computers with Windows already installed, you may not also sell these "naked" computers.

      But there are plenty of people out there who don't want an operating system pre-installed (I presume these people are like me who prefer free software, and who would install a Linux distribution on their new computer) so system builders started shipping computers with FreeDOS pre-installed. I think the premise is that customers will reformat the drive and install Linux anyway, but the system builder didn't technically sell a "naked" computer.

      I actually think this is very clever and I like the idea. A few users do keep FreeDOS installed on their system; occasionally I get emails from people who decided to keep FreeDOS installed (and probably dual-boot into Linux) so they could use FreeDOS to play old DOS games.

    2. Re:A popular laptop OS? by sremick · · Score: 2

      Dell most certainly does still offer FreeDOS. Perhaps just on some of their business line, but it's there.

      We've chosen it to save money when we were just going to put our own non-MS OS on there. Ubunutu is also an option on a number of models. RHEL too, but that'll cost you.

    3. Re:A popular laptop OS? by thetagger · · Score: 2

      Isn't DOS a horrible operating system to run these days? It doesn't support any energy management, so your computer will run really, really hot. It's better to boot Linux and run dosbox.

    4. Re:A popular laptop OS? by Beck_Neard · · Score: 2

      Yup, that's exactly it. Another thing about those computers is that they are often more 'geek-oriented' overall. I got a vostro 1320 laptop with freedos, for instance, and it has a backside panel for easy access to the fan and heatsink assembly. Cleaning the computer is literally a matter of just removing a pair of screws. Compare to some other laptops where you virtually have to disassemble down to the bare motherboard just to get the fan clean. It was also about $90 cheaper than the windows version, even though the specs were almost exactly the same. It's nice that companies still make computers like this. I wonder when it will end.

      --
      A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.
    5. Re:A popular laptop OS? by chipschap · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Good point. I've observed this too.

      I have a bootable USB stick which boots into FreeDOS. The only thing on the stick, besides the OS and some utilities, is a copy of an old, simple word processor called Better Working Word Processor. When I really want distraction-free writing, I boot this up and there is simply nothing else to do but write (somewhat a la Jonathan Franzen, though I'll never quite have the reputation to go with it).

      But I do notice that even with the hard drive spun down, battery life is little better than running my full Linux Mint installation.

    6. Re:A popular laptop OS? by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Informative

      Isn't DOS a horrible operating system to run these days? It doesn't support any energy management,

      false

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    7. Re:A popular laptop OS? by catmistake · · Score: 1

      But if you ask the typical user of OS X that never questions anything and always insists on new shiney, any OS older than 2 years old is "obsolete." So this OS is obsolete 10x over!!

      disclaimer: I am a UNIX/Linux Windows & OS X systems admin, and prefer OS X for desktop, and even I can't stand the moronic whiney bullshit that the self-proclaimed "expert" mac users puke out... please see comments here to see what I mean, as if you didn't know already.

    8. Re:A popular laptop OS? by catmistake · · Score: 1

      so they could use FreeDOS to play old DOS games

      That's not dumb or anything, but superfluous, considering this exists.

    9. Re:A popular laptop OS? by catmistake · · Score: 2

      RHEL too, but that will cost you

      I have downloaded before a full version, non-evaluation, fully working copy of RHEL before.... I believe this option still exists for those seeking it, but it is one of those well kept secrets and the link is burried deep somewhere at Red Hat's site. i.e. RHEL can be used for free, without support. It is possible Red Hat may have discontinued this for the "30 day evaluation" variety of free download, and that download link is gone forever, but regardless, Red Hat does not sell operating systems, they sell support, and that is what you pay for that costs. However, CentOS is identical to RHEL and is free to download and use, i.e. costs nothing. Oracle Linux is also RHEL, and also free to download and use, I believe. So no, if you don't pay for the support, using RHEL will cost you nothing.

    10. Re:A popular laptop OS? by chipschap · · Score: 1

      True about games (dosbox as an easy alternative) but not business software. dosbox doesn't support printing (I think there is one mod that does, but the mainstream doesn't) so if you want to use your old Lotus Agenda or Ventura Publisher or Xywrite, etc., FreeDOS may be preferred.

    11. Re:A popular laptop OS? by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

      FreeDOS was also a popular way to do firmware updates because it gets you to a well known state that's single tasking and nothing could interrupt the process. Especially nice was it was small and you could put it on a floppy with tons of space for your firmware and other things.

      Though nowadays, since most people don't boot from floppies, they now use Linux based update software - sure it's multitasking, but it's a nice controlled Linux environment to do stuff in. Especially since it doesn't have to all fit in a 1.44MB floppy - a thumbdrive or CD will let you easily a large amount of space so you can even have multiple updaters so the user only needs to download one huge "do it all" that figures out what needs updating over downloading and making a half dozen update disks hoping to have the right model and revision.

      And especially these days where DOS drivers are getting fewer and farther between, if you need drivers (e.g., SATA drivers), you're more likely to find it in Linux than in DOS. So for those things like SSD firmware updates, a Linux boot drive will likely be able to talk to most SATA controllers without the user needing to reconfigure their PC. For the leftovers, they can try using legacy mode, but the number of people who need it are far fewer.

      FreeDOS is almost never used for production - they have specialized boot images running Windows or whatever, then just wipe it with the final OS image

    12. Re:A popular laptop OS? by yuhong · · Score: 1

      I don't think APM works on most modern machines though. There is the DOS idle utilities which execute the HLT instruction which is not much but is better than nothing.

    13. Re:A popular laptop OS? by yuhong · · Score: 1

      I think UEFI is the best solution for things like this and many firmware update utilities already uses it for example.

    14. Re:A popular laptop OS? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Only if you've got a really old printer. Remember, DOS predates abstraction layers and clean printer APIs. You print from DOS by opening the serial or parallel port and sending some data over it. If you've got a DOS program that can print to PostScript printers, then you're better off printing to a file from DOSBox and then printing the result from the host OS.

      That said, there's little reason to use most DOS business applications these days. There are typically open source alternatives that are far better as they aren't written with such tight resource constraints in mind and can reuse GUI toolkits and so on (again, remember that DOS programs had to come with their own embedded GUI system and for most of them 4MB of RAM was a lot - a modern program can use more than that for the window buffer). I still occasionally fire up the Psion Series 3A emulator in DOSBox (if you tweak it a bit, it will run at 640x480) and use the spreadsheet though, because I've not found another one that's as easy to use with just a keyboard and constantly moving my hand from keyboard to mouse becomes annoying.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    15. Re:A popular laptop OS? by Threni · · Score: 1

      If that's true they might as well put a Linux distro on it!

    16. Re:A popular laptop OS? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I don't think APM works on most modern machines though.

      It's too bad you didn't read the link I provided, in which it is revealed that FreeDOS will use ACPI if APM is not present.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    17. Re:A popular laptop OS? by yuhong · · Score: 1

      Didn't know this. Looks like it is pretty limited though, as ACPI is much more complex than APM.

    18. Re:A popular laptop OS? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It's nice that companies still make computers like this. I wonder when it will end.

      I've got a Vostro 1500 right here, you've gotta take the whole lid off the bottom before you can get to the fan. But yeah, that's better than most laptops. On the other hand, there's a Fujitsu T900 in the house and it has a little plastic panel you remove, then you can blow air through the system as well as out of the intake. That's better than any of this other jazz by far.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  4. Surplus by RatBastard · · Score: 4, Interesting

    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.
    1. Re:Surplus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No wonder this crap has been surplussed! It's not a real computer because it doesn't run Windows!

  5. Re:20 years old? That doesn't solve my problem... by iced_773 · · Score: 1

    Have you tried a browser extension that changes the user agent string?

  6. Re:20 years old? That doesn't solve my problem... by bogaboga · · Score: 1

    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!

  7. Thanks by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Now i feel old. I was there in the beginning.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re: Thanks by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      you only need to feel old if you're still waiting for a working cdrom driver.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    2. Re:Thanks by catmistake · · Score: 1

      Now i feel old. I was there in the beginning.

      Some how I doubt that.

    3. Re:Thanks by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      And i will be there in the end.. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H...

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  8. Re:20 years old? That doesn't solve my problem... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    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?

  9. praise freedos! by nimbius · · Score: 1

    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.
    1. Re:praise freedos! by pbjones · · Score: 1

      20 years, oh dear, commander Keen, oh gosh, I am feeling so old.

      --
      There was an unknown error in the submission.
  10. Congratulations FreeDOS! by reshin · · Score: 1

    Thanks for your contribution to the world, Jim! Makes me want to look for Scorched Earth now.

  11. Don't forget about BIOS updates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    There have been several times that FreeDOS has saved the day for installing BIOS updates on older(-ish) Dell servers and whatnot.

  12. I'm waiting for ... by Tamran · · Score: 1

    ... FreeWinXP. I'm sure it'll be out any day now.

    1. Re:I'm waiting for ... by Tepar · · Score: 1
    2. Re:I'm waiting for ... by Nyder · · Score: 1

      http://www.reactos.org/

      Oh ya, that. Maybe when it's 20 years old, it might be out of alpha...

      --
      Be seeing you...
  13. SpinRite too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    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.

  14. As a retro gamer I can appreciate by Hamsterdan · · Score: 1

    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.
    1. Re:As a retro gamer I can appreciate by Reziac · · Score: 1

      As a fellow antiquitor, I covet your evicted Matrox vidcards :)

      Is it wrong that I keep a P4-3GHz (with ISA slots!) solely to run DOOM? :D Tho for some reason newer ISA sound cards refuse to play nice in it, so it makes do with the rather horrible-sounding SB16 that came in my original 486.

      Hmm, you don't happen to have a list of the various SET BLASTER lines for different SB cards?

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    2. Re:As a retro gamer I can appreciate by Hamsterdan · · Score: 1

      http://www.rinkworks.com/apoge...

      vogons.org is a reference for retro gaming

      --
      I've got better things to do tonight than die.
    3. Re:As a retro gamer I can appreciate by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Thanks!

      Somewhere out there is also a half-gig archive of SB drivers, tho my copy (which was hell to get downloaded in one piece) is stashed on a disk in storage which isn't very useful right now.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  15. Re:I would like to see FreeWin by ruir · · Score: 1

    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.

  16. Re:I would like to see FreeWin by jones_supa · · Score: 1

    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?

  17. Another World / Out Of This World by DJRikki · · Score: 1

    Amazing game in all ways

  18. Re:20 years old? That doesn't solve my problem... by zwarte+piet · · Score: 1

    The Opera browser has a setting to impersonate Internet Exploder for certain pages. Works fine.