Hi, some suggestion to comment on the list :-)
From marinelluccia1 tiscali.it:
Hi at all,
please remember to include in distro 1.1 a shell for freedos.
i suggest freedos shell from Emanuele Cipolla
http://fdshell.sourceforge.net/
because it's more standard doshell clone i've found.
Emanuele
Hi!
XMGR. HIMEMX (AFAICT) has no maintainer (and/or we really need to push
out that jmp $+2 fix for old 386s, i.e. unofficial version 3.33,
In other words, Japheth took over HIMEMX but does not add the patch?
www.freedos.org/software/
To be completely honest, please don't take this the
On Jul 16, 2011, at 11:38 PM, Rugxulo wrote:
Included with this zip file is the a86 assembler used to compile the
code, which obviously would need to be removed for the freedos
distribution copy, since it's a completely separate application.
Just for the record, A86 is shareware, so in
Hi again Rugxulo,
So VMware needs PCNET? VirtualBox needs AMDPD? QEMU needs NE2000?
Anybody know BOCHS? (Yes, I'm assuming more re: emulation than real
hardware here, isn't that reasonable?)
Bochs emulates a bad(?) NE2000 and a nonstandard PCI Pseudo NIC
for which an Etherboot driver exists
Most attractive to average users (rough guess):
Mpxplay
Bret's USB
CuteMouse
mTCP + common packet drivers
Arachne
WGET
Mined
GNU Emacs
Perl
Python
OpenGem
OpenWatcom + NASM
FreeDoom + Eternity Engine
HXRT + HXGUI
p7zip
DJGPP (GCC + GPP + Watt-32)
UIDE + XMGR + RDISK + SHCDX33E
Hi,
On 7/17/11, Eric Auer e.a...@jpberlin.de wrote:
XMGR. HIMEMX (AFAICT) has no maintainer (and/or we really need to push
out that jmp $+2 fix for old 386s, i.e. unofficial version 3.33,
In other words, Japheth took over HIMEMX but does not add the patch?
No. In fact, he has explicitly
The provox screen reader for dos which I would like to have added to
the freedos ftp site is currently located at:
http://www.thesiegelsnest.us/provox/provox7.zip
[...]
Included with this zip file is the a86 assembler used to compile the
code, which obviously would need to be removed for the
Hi,
On 7/17/11, Travis Siegel tsie...@softcon.com wrote:
I own the registered copy of a86, and I know 4.05 is the latest. I
didn't write the provox program, merely took it over from it's
original author. Apparently, 3.22 is the version used for development.
Another reason why I figured it
To be completely honest, please don't take this the wrong way, but
some of those I literally never use (or can't remember how!):
* append
* assign
[...]
The idea of BASE is to provide at least clones of all commands that
MS DOS users had in their standard installation of MS DOS, while of
On Sun, 17 Jul 2011, Rugxulo wrote:
Hi,
On 7/17/11, Eric Auer e.a...@jpberlin.de wrote:
Comp: You are right, FC replaces it.
Well, yes, I know all (most?) DOSes have both, but FC can do ASCII
(default) or binary (/b), so I don't ever use COMP.
In DOS 2-4, PC DOS had COMP (which it had
I don't know that I've used this DOSSHELL before. I just tried it now,
and once I got used to the key commands, it seemed easy to use, and
very nice.
The source requires Microsoft BASIC Compiler to build. Is there a free
version of Microsoft BASIC Compiler (DOS) out there? I haven't found
it on
But, IIRC, this was verbatim the version from OpenWatcom. My point was
that people who are developers already have it (or similar). If we're
going to include it, we should also include link (like MS-DOS used
to). Also, there's no DOSSHELL or BASIC there either, and nobody
complained. So some
Hi,
On 7/17/11, Jim Hall jh...@freedos.org wrote:
Most attractive to average users (rough guess):
While I'm glad to see enthusiasm for what the next FreeDOS distro
should include, and you've got a lot of interesting stuff above, I'll
point out that this is a classic example of scope creep.
Hi,
On 7/17/11, Jim Hall jh...@freedos.org wrote:
I don't know that I've used this DOSSHELL before. I just tried it now,
and once I got used to the key commands, it seemed easy to use, and
very nice.
It looks okay, but it's fairly minimal. I'd heavily prefer Doszip, honestly.
The source
Hi,
On 7/17/11, Jim Hall jh...@freedos.org wrote:
The provox screen reader for dos which I would like to have added to
the freedos ftp site is currently located at:
[...]
Included with this zip file is the a86 assembler used to compile
Just for the record, A86 is shareware, so in theory
Op 17-7-2011 23:23, Rugxulo schreef:
This was merely an exercise at naming popular, i.e. heavily-desired,
apps that most common users might probably want. It is not intended to
reflect my own goofy needs.
And besides, most of these already were in FD 1.0, so nyah. ;-)
For a full CD it's
On Sun, 17 Jul 2011, Rugxulo wrote:
Hi,
On 7/17/11, Jim Hall jh...@freedos.org wrote:
I don't know that I've used this DOSSHELL before. I just tried it now,
and once I got used to the key commands, it seemed easy to use, and
very nice.
It looks okay, but it's fairly minimal. I'd heavily
Op 17-7-2011 23:01, Jim Hall schreef:
To keep FreeDOS free we need to use free software tools wherever
possible. That's why we encourage NASM and OpenWatcom, and other free
tools. We have a few programs still that use Borland's TurboC
compiler, but I believe this is still available for free
On Jul 17, 2011, at 5:37 PM, Rugxulo wrote:
However, DTC.LIB doesn't seem to have sources, but I'm not sure what
exactly that does or if it's needed or what the deal is, so we'll have
to wait for Travis to explain that. (Perhaps that is the optional
hardware synthesizer part??)
Hmm, good
Hi,
On 7/17/11, Bernd Blaauw bbla...@home.nl wrote:
Op 17-7-2011 23:23, Rugxulo schreef:
This was merely an exercise at naming popular, i.e. heavily-desired,
apps that most common users might probably want. It is not intended to
reflect my own goofy needs.
And besides, most of these already
Hi,
On 7/17/11, Steve Nickolas lyricalnan...@usotsuki.hoshinet.org wrote:
On Sun, 17 Jul 2011, Rugxulo wrote:
Doszip at least can build with OpenWatcom and JWasm, so that's good.
Can the 16-bit version of DOS Navigator be made to build on OpenWatcom?
That's a pretty good shell (Norton
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