Hello! I may be some kind of a geek who still studies ASCII, even in the 21st 
century, but I 
may need some technical help. So, the Keysoft c++ compiler and SDK isn't 
available right 
now, well how about this? I've never done it (I would need access to my own 
personal laptop or 
desktop), but from MS-DOS to Windows 7 and everything in between, there is this 
command called Debug. It can 
be accessed from Command Prompt, command line, cmd.exe, whatever you want to 
call it. People who know 
Assembly Language can create compiled (or, in this case, assembled) EXE files 
that work. For 
example, if I type debug in Windows Vista's Command Prompt, I can then type in 
the name 
command, such as:
N formatusbflashdrive.exe
After pressing Enter on that, you press A to get into the Assembly programming 
system. Then, you 
type the Assembly commands to do what you want it to do. I believe you then 
press W to assemble the 
commands into the machine language of the operating system, and produce a 
working, living EXE file. You 
then press Q to get out of the Debug interface, and then Exit to get out of the 
MS-DOS. Windows 
CE is Windows; the websites act like all DOS and Windows can do that! Is 
Windows CE an 
extraterrestrial alien claiming he was invented by Bill Gates and his cronies? 
Because if Debug 
honestly doesn't work on it, then why call it Windows? Is ARM anti DOS, and x86 
is 
all about command prompts?
Tyler Z

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