My first thing would be to try booting without JEMM. There's another (better,
IMO) Extended Memory driver which doesn't tend to lead to exceptions like JEMM
does.
Best o' luck to ye!
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‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Thursday, May
Hi,Sorry to email but need a little help please, if someone would be so kind?I just acquired a £30 Ebay bargain, a good condition Lenovo Thinkpad X100E. Nice little laptop (runs a little hot in Linux) which I've dual booted with FreeDOS 1.2 & Peppermint Linux. I have been trying to get a packet
how do i use a usb drive with FreeDOS to play DOS games?
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DosZip commander sees the long filenames on the Windows 2000 C drive, but when
I try to copy these files to an external USB
hard drive I run into errors. Short of opening the case, I don't think I can
use GHOST on the external drive as the restore target.
I also think the internal hard drive
On Thu, May 09, 2019 at 04:53:26PM +0200, C. Masloch wrote:
> I needed something similar in my lDebug symbolic anyway, so I created a
> quick patch to add a Y command in my fork of FreeDOS's DEBUG. You give
> it a filename (LFN or SFN, use double quote marks if to escape blanks)
> and it pushes
Hello,
On at 2019-05-05 18:16 +0200, ZB wrote:
> For testing small snippets of ML code "debug" is quite enough. But the
> disadvantage is that when I try to script it ("debug using files like this example:
>
> a 100
> mov ax,10
> [...some other ML code...]
> [...some other ML code...]
>
Hi,
On Wed, May 8, 2019 at 7:38 PM Michael Christopher Robinson
wrote:
>
> So I create a zip archive of my Win2k C drive on say an external
> drive's partition from FreeDOS, boot into 2000, and unzip the file on
> the external from 2000? I think zip and unzip in freedos require that
> I install
Hi,
On Wed, May 8, 2019 at 3:38 PM Michael Christopher Robinson
wrote:
>
> Before Windows 2000, even in Windows 95, FAT32 was introduced with
> supported for longer filenames than the 8.3 limit of Dos 6.22.
FAT32 debuted in something like Win95 OSR2 or whatever. I'm no expert,
but Win95 had
Hi!
> I'd prefer to leave Linux out of this as Linux may not boot
> on an Agilent analyzer because of the proprietary
> Intel video card and proprietary touchscreen.
I think it will boot and it will support a normal VGA screen
plugged into the VGA connector at the backside of your device.
It