If there were only retail copies of FreeDOS.
On Fri, May 29, 2015, 10:25 AM JAYDEN CHARBONNEAU jcharbonnea...@cpsge.org
wrote:
If only there was a holographic FreeDOS (Like for the Samsung SMart
window,or Microsoft's hololense).If there was a holographic FreeDOS,I would
throw a party.(Think
Hi
snip
Do ZM EXEs actually exist?
Yes. Any 16-bit MS-DOS target compiler generates MZ executables. FreeDOS is
full of them.
I've also been curious as to what the format is for .TOS binaries (since
GEMDOS has such a similar API to MS-DOS).
Grab one and run it through a hex editor.
Hi,
See my other email. In DOS, MZ=ZM, I guess Microsoft changed course at some
point. They are typically called MZ executables.
On Jun 8, 2015, at 8:55 PM, Steve Nickolas usots...@buric.co wrote:
On Mon, 8 Jun 2015, Antony Gordon wrote:
Hi
snip
Do ZM EXEs actually exist?
Yes.
On Mon, 8 Jun 2015, Antony Gordon wrote:
Hi,
See my other email. In DOS, MZ=ZM, I guess Microsoft changed course at
some point. They are typically called MZ executables.
I was specifically referring to the specific magic number that would show
up as ZM in a text editor. All the files I've
And I said MJ for Michael Jordan not Michael Jackson.
On 09/06/2015 10:51 am, Steve Nickolas usots...@buric.co wrote:
On Mon, 8 Jun 2015, Antony Gordon wrote:
Hi
snip
Do ZM EXEs actually exist?
Yes. Any 16-bit MS-DOS target compiler generates MZ executables. FreeDOS
is full of
Hi,
It’s all semantics. Most signatures are MZ, but some old linkers (not sure if
they are even in use) used ZM according to RBIL
Values for the executable types understood by various environments:
MZ old-style DOS executable (see #01594
Hi
snip
I'd suggest using 0xC3 0x00 as a magic number for any non-8086 executable.
Or, for preference, using a 4-byte magic number: 0xC3 0x00 0x00 followed by
a byte giving the supported CPU architecture. Then the logic in the loader
would be:
0xC3 0x00 0x00 suitable architecture -
On Mon, 8 Jun 2015, Antony Gordon wrote:
Hi,
It’s all semantics. Most signatures are MZ, but some old linkers (not sure if
they are even in use) used ZM according to RBIL
Values for the executable types understood by various environments:
MZ old-style DOS executable (see #01594
On Tue, 9 Jun 2015, John Elliott wrote:
If you can mark the EXEs as something other than MZ, you could perhaps
make a TSR loader stub that loads an x86 emulator on demand to run EXE
files.
COM... I think you're gonna be stuck with using only an EXE format because
trying to detect a COM file
On Mon, 8 Jun 2015, Antony Gordon wrote:
Hi
snip
Do ZM EXEs actually exist?
Yes. Any 16-bit MS-DOS target compiler generates MZ executables. FreeDOS is
full of them.
I said ZM, not MZ.
-uso.
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