I had a spare machine laying about in my shop, and decided on a lark to
set it up as a DOS 6 machine, along with some of the old applications I
used back in the day (and several to this day!).
A 2012-era Intel machine can still boot DOS with QEMM386, Windows 3.1
(for solitaire only, please) and run 1-2-3 r2.2 like a champ.
I was putting together a demo to wow my all my friends (yeah right),
creating some tables and charts in 1-2-3, data sources in Q&A, and
finally tying them all together in a WordPerfect 5.1 document. Just like
back in the day, I quickly grew frustrated with single-tasking;
switching back and forth, forgetting the names of documents and ranges,
not being able to copy and paste between programs.
All this was ringing a bell for DesqView, so I found a copy and put it
on the machine. In no time, I was slapping left-alt to launch, switch,
copy & paste, all as smoothly and stably as I remembered.
DesqView was fantastic; and despite the awful operating system, the DOS library is full of titles that were absolutely next level. No other OS
has even come close, and DesqView made it actually enjoyable to workk
with!
Rube Longfellow wrote:
I had a spare machine laying about in my shop, and decided on a lark to
set it up as a DOS 6 machine, along with some of the old applications I
used back in the day (and several to this day!).
A 2012-era Intel machine can still boot DOS with QEMM386, Windows 3.1
(for solitaire only, please) and run 1-2-3 r2.2 like a champ.
No need for Windows; there are plenty of DOS solitaire games available.
I'm running a 2013 AMD machine. It can boot DOS, but due to the high amount of RAM installed (16GB), it acts... a bit off. Plus, it *really* doesn't
like my 2-4TB hard drives. (My previous machines always had a DOS partition. Not this one.)
I was putting together a demo to wow my all my friends (yeah right),
creating some tables and charts in 1-2-3, data sources in Q&A, and
finally tying them all together in a WordPerfect 5.1 document. Just like
back in the day, I quickly grew frustrated with single-tasking;
switching back and forth, forgetting the names of documents and ranges,
not being able to copy and paste between programs.
All this was ringing a bell for DesqView, so I found a copy and put it
on the machine. In no time, I was slapping left-alt to launch, switch,
copy & paste, all as smoothly and stably as I remembered.
DesqView was fantastic; and despite the awful operating system, the DOS
library is full of titles that were absolutely next level. No other OS
has even come close, and DesqView made it actually enjoyable to workk
with!
I have a "made for Windows Vista" machine that I put DVX on. It works just fine as long as I keep the RAM and drive capacity down to reasonable levels, but I find that I don't use it for anything, because, well, I just don't. Before I put my current machine together, I spent maybe a quarter of my computing time in DOS, but my main machine has gotten me out of the habit. [shrug]
If I want/need to use a DOS app, I use some form of emulation -- depending
on my needs and which specific app, I'll use DOSbox, WineVDM, or actual DOS under VMware.
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