In a message dated: Thu, 04 Jan 2001 09:59:55 EST
Benjamin Scott said:
>On Thu, 4 Jan 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> I have heard there are some emulators out there, but I don't know if there
>> is one that stands above the rest.
I think he was referring to game emulators, not OS/HW emulators.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> This has me thinking (a dangerous thing indeed). I still love some of the
> older DOS / Win 3.x games. In the next couple weeks I hope to find time to
> load up gnome on my Debian box (I've only run command line linux so far),
> and would love to put some of those g
On Thu, 4 Jan 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I have heard there are some emulators out there, but I don't know if there
> is one that stands above the rest.
DOSemu, the DOS emulator, contains a pretty complete implementation of the
MS-DOS feature set. No URL.
Wine, the Windows emulator, wi
In a message dated: Thu, 04 Jan 2001 09:44:01 EST
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
>I have heard there are some emulators out there, but I don't know if there
>is one that stands above the rest. If it matters, the games I'm thinking
>of most are X-Com (original), Pirates Gold and Wingcommander Privateer
e to
eventually allow games requiring DirectX to run under a linux gui?
- Larry Tilly
-Original Message-
From: Benjamin Scott [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 4:27 PM
To: Greater NH Linux Users' Group
Subject:
A the good old days. I remember programming a mainframe to do some basic
space navigation (simple landing problem) via FORTRAN and punchards (that was
a fun computer class - 1 day turnaround minimum on a run)
---
Jeffry Smit
Benjamin Scott writes:
> I still fondly remember playing Duke Nukem and Commander Keen in 16 color
> EGA. :-)
I still fondly remember playing space war on the console
switches of the PDP-1. I was a little late to hear "Anchors Away"
played on a chain printer.
On Sat, 30 Dec 2000, Derek D. Martin wrote:
> Anybody download Doom shareware on 4 floppies from your local BBS? Then
> realize that your little 386 with 1MB wasn't machine enough to run it?
Heh heh heh. A friend and I spent several days downloading Doom over 2400
BPS modems when it came out
al Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On
Behalf Of Tom Rauschenbach
Sent: Saturday, December 30, 2000 7:41 PM
To: Charles Farinella
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: New distribution?
On Sat, 30 Dec 2000, you wrote:
> It's time for me to rebuild my system, and I
Randy Edwards said:
> Now that the license issues have been cleared up, the new testing
> version of Debian ("Woody") officially has KDE2 in it.
Slight correction to both Randy and my earlier post - KDE2 used to be in Woody
(when it was in unstable), and is still in unstable, but is not in Woo
> I'd try Debian, but have not found one with KDE2.
Now that the license issues have been cleared up, the new testing
version of Debian ("Woody") officially has KDE2 in it.
If you add the line:
deb http://kde.tdyc.com/ potato kde kde2 contrib rkrusty
into your /etc/apt/sources.list fi
They've solved the KDE/Debian issue (the legality of distributing KDE (GPL)
and QT (QPL) together, since there we license conflicts, not because QT was
not open-source). KDE 2 is in unstable now, so it will be in the next stable.
Someone's got the KDE stuff for potato, outside of Debian.
-
> I know that everyone is jazzed about Debian, but I'm a little
> concerned about the install.
Ben isn't jazzed. :-)
Seriously, the install isn't that bad -- as long as you don't expect to
have everything working perfectly in an hour or so. Debian requires some
tweaking and playing to get
Charles Farinella wrote:
> I know that everyone is jazzed about Debian, but I'm a little
> concerned about the install.
If you want to try out Debian, but don't want to brave the install,
check out Storm Linux. It's Debian with a slick installer. After the
install, just change your apt-sources a
For the last year I have been working on making custom distros; at work I
have needed to come up with a way to install a _very_ custom linux on
special hardware. I start with the basic RedHat (6.2) install CD and
hack it up to suit my needs.
I have come up with 2 methods:
1) Delete the RedHat
Charles Farinella wrote:
> It's time for me to rebuild my system, and I'd like to try a non-RedHat
> distro
I've used several different distributions (Yggdrasil, Slackware,
Caldera, TurboLinux, RedHat, Mandrake, Debian, Suse come to mind). Which
one you use is a matter of taste. Often, I'll us
>isn't practical. I'd try Debian, but have not found one with KDE2.
No, they haven't put it into Potato. Maybe they will solve the kde/debian war
after a while, and it will be in the next stable distribution.
--Ferenc
**
To unsubscribe f
On Sat, Dec 30, 2000 at 08:46:51PM -0500, Ken D'Ambrosio wrote:
> pretty package...) All things being equal, this beats the pants off of
> downloading Slackware one disk at a time over the ol' 14.4 modem. From a
Been there, done that! Ahhh... nostalgia.
Anybody download Doom shareware on 4
Well... Slackware is the oldest extant distribution. It's really kinda
nifty -- brings you back to the "old days" of Linux, though I admit I
haven't used it since 3.3 or 3.4. I used to be a huge Slackware fan, but,
slowly, came about to the dark side of package managers (Slackware's
"packages"
I have used SuSE for a couple of years and prefer it to the others. There
are several similarities to Tru64 Unix which is what I work on at work.
Charles Farinella wrote:
> It's time for me to rebuild my system, and I'd like to try a non-RedHat
> distro. I know that everyone is jazzed about Debi
On Sat, 30 Dec 2000, you wrote:
> It's time for me to rebuild my system, and I'd like to try a non-RedHat
> distro. I know that everyone is jazzed about Debian, but I'm a little
> concerned about the install.
>
> I'm kind of intrigued by Slackware, and wondered if folks might have some
> opinion
It's time for me to rebuild my system, and I'd like to try a non-RedHat
distro. I know that everyone is jazzed about Debian, but I'm a little
concerned about the install.
I'm kind of intrigued by Slackware, and wondered if folks might have some
opinions they might share with me. (Opinions? Us?
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