> Whom are you addressing
Anybody that want's to talk about it.
I like your points. And yes the single program is a plus.

On Wed, Apr 14, 2021 at 9:25 AM Thomas Desi <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> HI Johnpaul - whom are you addressing in your mail saying
> > "So my question is, why do YOU use FreeDOS?"
>
> just in case…  ;) here is my „ranting rating“:
>
> - I am 50ish and not so much nostalgic about computing, but:
>
> - want to get rid of networking on my „composing tool“
> - want to have a lighting fast bootup
> - want to have 1 (one!!) single app that I use,
> - don’t want the virus thing (do we?)
> - don’t want all those hidden spying/cookies/passwords/logins
> - (single user instance, at home, old computer: who ever would want to get 
> into my files? If they start the computer, they wouldn’t know what to do when 
> seeing the FreeDos splash screen ; ) - Kidding)
> - don't want "update nagging“, this has become crazyness. (legacy program 
> like, e.g. VDE Editor and others can’t possibly made any better … like in 
> „here is the update to the wheel“..)
> - want to be able to switch the thing off with a button: „Zip!“ and walk away 
> from the screen.
> - (and no waiting or „the computer was not correctly shut down … bla blabla“)
> - No „power saving“ or „standby modes“ which anyway also consume quite an 
> amount of energy, with funny standby-lights flashing all night in your 
> appartment. Just switch it entirely off.
> - single simple view of what I have written (actual OS suggest to become a 
> virtuoso in creating folders/directories and drop files on a „desktop“ which 
> is a fake folder, too…
> - want to have single files that represent an „app“. (not thousands of 
> libraries, dependencies, installs, dlls, blablabl)
> - a disk with FEW files alltogether. (Windows10 uses around 300,000 files for 
> a fresh 12 GIGABYTE install! THREEHUNDRED THOUSAND)
> - a system of a handful of commands I program on my „macro pad“ - and press 
> it without need to type in, not even „dir“ or „cd ..“ or „type“ etc…
> - want SIMPLICITY, purism, „control“ ...
> - want to learn to understand a little how actually a computer works as a 
> tool, not as a consumer gadget that could - theoretically - do EVERYTHING and 
> drives me nuts because of the running „why doesn’t it do this and that“…
> - and a few more which sound quite similar to your reasons!
>
> I agree that there has been a huge amount of programming work, carefully 
> written out documentations and alike become obsolete in the last decades.
>
> In my experience (Text/composing/editing( I don’t see ANY difference working 
> on a Windows10 Computer in Word today and how it was back in say 1988 when I 
> had my first machine regarding the workflow… Text-editing hasn’t changed in 
> the last decades, that is why Emacs and VI(m) are still much in use. But I 
> guess this is a different story and doesn’t fit into this thread.
>
>
> - T-h-omas
>
>
> > Am 14.04.2021 um 17:59 schrieb Johnpaul Humphrey <[email protected]>:
> >
> > In light of the "DOS was dead" discussion, I wanted to ask a question.
> > I was *born* after support was dropped for MS-DOS, so I can't claim
> > nostalgia as my reason for use. Recently I installed FreeDOS on my
> > modern HP-Pavilion laptop, alongside BSD, Linux, and plan9. I did this
> > because I like DOS's speed and assembly programming.
> > It worked fine after I fixed the beep bug with your help.
> > So my question is, why do YOU use FreeDOS?
> > Is it primarily nostalgia? Legacy program support? Speed?
> > Note that I don't consider running legacy software a bad reason. I was
> > shocked by how much good software has been "thrown away" because of
> > its age. On Linux all my favorite software (vi, siag office, twm,
> > motif &c.) was written before I was born. However, that is not my
> > primary reason for using FreeDOS. my primary reason is because it is
> > like the motorcycle of operating systems. It is lightweight, has no
> > red tape to cut through to do things, and is monotasking. (Monotasking
> > is also why I don't use it as much as I would like to, but why I use
> > it at all.)
> > I figured that if I had a different reason than what everybody
> > assumes, that some of you might as well. Everyone seems to assume that
> > DOS is used by people who are unable to cope with progress and have to
> > run their ancient version of word perfect. If that is your reason, it
> > is not a bad reason. I was thinking of eventually writing a 64-bit dos
> > work [sort of] alike eventually, but it would not be able to support
> > legacy programs due to segment offset addressing and a million other
> > things.
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Freedos-user mailing list
> > [email protected]
> > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user
> >
>
>
>
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-- 
Johnpaul T. Humphrey


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