On 05/02/2016 07:51 PM, Robert Johnson wrote: > > While I can’t however speak to the vagaries of VB4 specifically, I’m > reasonably certain (having run 16-bit only software on windows 7 and > 8) that ll 32-bit versions of windows continue to support > NTVDM/16-bit applications. With windows 8 you have to install the > subsystem (its not installed by default) but it does work.
That's the rub--I believe that Mark said that he was using Win 10 64-bit. The hardware's not there to run 16-bit code natively in 64 bit mode. WINE is probably pretty good, or DOSBox, or VirtualBox--something that can emulate/translate the 16-bit code to something that 64 bit Windows can run. --Chuck
