Hi,

On Thu, Jun 29, 2023 at 12:46 PM Jim Hall via Freedos-devel
<freedos-devel@lists.sourceforge.net> wrote:
>
> In 1994, several of us got together around a pretty neat idea.
>
> We liked DOS, but Microsoft was clearly moving completely to Windows. "The 
> next version of Windows," they said, "would do away with DOS."
>
> We wanted to keep DOS around, so we decided to write our own. That project, 
> announced 29 years ago TODAY on June 29 1994, was the FreeDOS Project.
>
> Thanks to EVERYONE who is (or has been) part of FreeDOS! 29 years is a long 
> time for any open source project, and I'm looking forward to more years to 
> come.


Congrats to my favorite operating system. (In fairness, there are
other great OSes too, not just the obvious ones.) My own birthday was
yesterday, and 1994 was when I got my first IBM PC (with MS-DOS 6.00
and Windows 3.1).

You've done great work, keeping the legacy alive. There was so much
cool stuff for DOS over the years (not just games). I'm particularly
fond of compilers and utilities myself.

I will forever think that some people are geniuses for their work on
FreeDOS like Eric Auer. It's just amazing what some people
accomplished. I was only able to contribute very small stuff, but
hopefully it helped anyways.

The spotlight may have faded for DOS over the years, but that doesn't
diminish their hard work. Dedicated fans like us will never forget all
the cool stuff that was accomplished with it. May it live forever in
emulation.


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