Hello Aitor,

If I got your question right: the “lazy Turkish” codepage I have seen is
FreeDOS CP 3846. (Hungary also extensively used CWI–2 in the late ’80s all
the way through the ’00s — and to a certain extent, even to this day, e.g.
in retail/POS systems — and I am sure I’ve seen at least one PC with a
Hungarized BIOS font in the late ’90s to early ’00s somewhere, that
codepage is CP 3845.) AFAIK the Mazovia 1016 had the variant of the Mazovia
encoding with a złoty sign, that particular version is FreeDOS CP 991 but
I’ll let Mateusz correct me would I be wrong.

Regards,
Vacek

On Sun, Aug 3, 2025 at 8:55 PM Aitor Santamaría via Freedos-user <
freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net> wrote:

> Hello Vacek and Matheusz,
>
> Very interesting to know.
> Are you able to identify which is the codepage ID that the BIOS is
> implementing in those cases?
>
> Thanks,
> Aitor
>
>
> El sáb, 2 ago 2025 a las 22:29, Mateusz Viste via Freedos-user (<
> freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net>) escribió:
>
>> On 02/08/2025 21:34, Vacek Nules via Freedos-user wrote:
>> > Just for reference, there /were/ indeed PCs shipped with a Turkish ROM
>> > font
>>
>> Same in Poland: the Mazovia 1016 PC had Polish glyphs in ROM.
>>
>> Similar story with the ЕС ПЭВМ and Поиск computers from CCCP, as well as
>> the Bulgarian Pravetz-16 series.
>>
>> It was also common practice to replace the ROMs of Hercules cards to fit
>> them with local glyphs.
>>
>> Mateusz
>>
>>
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