Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:

> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
>  Duncan Booth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
>>Windows variants such as NT/2000/XP are not based on MS-DOS in any way.
> 
> Then why are Windows system files still restricted to 8.3 names? Doesn't 
> that restriction derive from a core MS-DOS-based kernel?

Can you give an example where the filenames are restricted to 8.3 names (as 
opposed to just happening to use names which fit within 8.3)?

A lot of the files and directories in the C:\Windows folder have non 8.3 
names, and though many of them aren't part of the core system they are 
still 'system files'. Of course .Net is where the filenames become really 
gross.

There is no MSDOS kernel in any of the the systems I mentioned.

There is an MSDOS subsystem which is loaded when required to run old 
applications: NT had 5 subsytems: Win32, Posix, OS/2, MSDOS virtual 
machine, and WOW (16 bit windows emulation). XP dropped the OS/2 and Posix 
subsystems. XP 64-bit edition also drops the MS-DOS and WOW subsystems (it 
adds a WOW64 subsystem to handle 32-bit binaries).
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