Yes I see the same behavior with a fresh formatted c Drive image and
mounted the iso.
On Wed, Sep 25, 2019 at 12:30 AM Jon Brase wrote:
> I managed to get the installer to pull packages off the CD, but one thing
> you may be running into is that QEMU de-assigns ISO images from the
> emulated CD
I managed to get the installer to pull packages off the CD, but one thing you
may be running into is that QEMU de-assigns ISO images from the emulated CD
drive when the OS sends a disk eject command. On a physical machine, if the CD
drive ejects a disk you're still using, you notice it and just
Interesting, I did have a similar issue on real hardware recently, though the
situation was enough different that I'm not sure whether they match up, and I
didn't so much resolve it as work around it.
I generally use virt-manager rather than the command line to set up QEMU VMs.
I'm not sure what
That most definitely provided some clarification! Thank you!
Just to clarify: when I install a program, say from fdimples, a text file
I created and placed in the PACKAGES directory, and from there I am view it
with my editor of choice?
Can I move these programs around? Or would moving the exec
Sorry for the confusion. I’m new to QEMU.
So…
I created the image with the below command:
qemu-img create dos.img 200M
This is my command line to execute QEMU and mount the drives and emulate
devices is below:
qemu-system-i386 -m 16 -k en-us -rtc base=localtime -device cirru
FreeDOS (x86 software) won't boot (natively) on the Raspberry Pi 3 (ARM
hardware), so if you got as far as to be able to select "install to hard disk",
you must be using an x86 emulator, and, indeed, your screenshot shows that
you're using QEMU. To minimize confusion, you should lead with the in
Are you installing freedos under a VM or directly in the SD???
> El 24 set. 2019, a la(s) 22:16, shift83...@gmail.com escribió:
>
>
> I have tried multiple times to install FreeDOS on Raspberry Pi3.
>
> I have created a 100M and 200M raw disk image.
>
> Mounted the Standard and then tried
I have tried multiple times to install FreeDOS on Raspberry Pi3.
I have created a 100M and 200M raw disk image.
Mounted the Standard and then tried with the Legacy ISO.
Both will boot the ISO, partition and format the hard disk. But when I
reboot and select the Install to Harddisk after
As for ... where is that stuff I installed?
There are a couple ways.
1) while in FDIMPLES, you can TAB down to the description area. Then scroll
down to see a list of files in the package and there path information. Some
paths are translated and changed durin mg installation. So, this is not e
To be quite honest, I know it may seem a bit illogical to do but, I am trying
to move myself towards a more traditional (retro?) way of computing. Learning
how to use the Linux system from the terminal was the start, and now I am
trying to use freeDOS. It is a bit of a learning curve though, for
Oh man, that sounds great! I have a shirt history with the open sourced world (
I really didn't know that it even EXISTED), but I have a VERY strong love
(maybe infatuation?) for it now. Something about the way everything is, and how
unique the software can be, and of course the community is awe
Just wanted to share that OpenSource.com is always looking for people
to write about open source software. I'm not employed by them, but I
have written for OpenSource in the past - so I'm on their "writers"
email list.
One of the editors recently sent out a general reminder that they are
looking f
Ralf Quint wrote:
I was actually able to find a direct download at
ftp://ftp.elf.stuba.sk/pub/pc/utildisk/doscdrb3.zip
http://bootcd.narod.ru/index_e.htm has some CDRTools, which include a
burning program but never used that either.
I have not tried it, but found cdrkit here:
http://www.ibi
On 9/24/2019 10:58 AM, Jim Hall wrote:
On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 9:36 AM geneb wrote:
For those that want to play with 86Box, I've created a FreeDOS disk image
for you to play with:
http://www.geneb.org/86box/FreeDOS Machine.7z
I've also got an "ultimate DOS development system" image put togethe
On 9/24/2019 7:09 AM, George Frothingham wrote:
Hi
Can you suggest CD-ROM burner software to burn data files from FreeDOS
to CD-R disks ?
I am pretty sure there was never a "free" (Open Source or otherwise)
one. Currently try to remember what I used back in the late '80s, I
think it was what
On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 9:36 AM geneb wrote:
>
> For those that want to play with 86Box, I've created a FreeDOS disk image
> for you to play with:
> http://www.geneb.org/86box/FreeDOS Machine.7z
>
> I've also got an "ultimate DOS development system" image put together with
> a ton of development t
Not able to keep up with the volume.
On 2019-09-24 11:04, Jim Hall wrote:
> Thanks! I didn't see the "r" in the version number.
>
> I've mirrored these to ibiblio. Since they contains diffs from
> original sources, I also made sure to mirror original sources too.
>
> On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 11:
Thanks! I didn't see the "r" in the version number.
I've mirrored these to ibiblio. Since they contains diffs from
original sources, I also made sure to mirror original sources too.
On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 11:24 AM wrote:
>
> Yes the main difference is that the [exec] command works in the updat
On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 9:09 AM ZB wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 11:34:36AM -0400, Wayne Dernoncourt wrote:
>
> > Do you know if this includes BLT?
If the above was about me, I really have no idea, why you called me like that.
>
> Do you really think that presently TCL has such strong presence
I have a gut feeling that expect requires true multitasking and IPC, which DOS
doesn't offer but it may be available in some environments like Desqview/X.
Not certain.
On September 24, 2019 9:14:26 AM PDT, dmccunney
wrote:
>On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 8:35 AM ZB wrote:
>> On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at
Yes the main difference is that the [exec] command works in the updated version
and there is a new revision number in the downloaded .zip archive filename.
On September 24, 2019 9:08:34 AM PDT, Jim Hall wrote:
>Are these different (i.e. updated?) from the versions mirrored already
>on ibiblio?
>
On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 09:14:26AM -0700, dmccunney wrote:
> The "killer app" for TCL is Expect, a TCL script from Don Libes
I'm aware of that, personally using TCL/Tk since more than 10 years. But,
sadly, that 10 years ago there was _much_ more "movement" on comp.lang.tcl
than today... and indee
Thia does not include BLT nor Tk. Eventually i would like to include Tcl-fltk
on Fltkal.
On September 24, 2019 8:34:36 AM PDT, Wayne Dernoncourt
wrote:
>Do you know if this includes BLT?
>
>This clown speaks for himself
>
>> On Sep 24, 2019, at 11:27 AM, Ben Collver
>wrote:
>>
>> Tcl is a s
On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 8:35 AM ZB wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 08:25:43AM -0700, Ben Collver wrote:
>
> > Tcl is a script language originally created by Dr. John Ousterhout, who is
> > currently a Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University.
>
> Thanks!
> I'm actually somewhat amazed
I’ve been looking for years for a language/package that makes it simpler to
generate graphs & charts. So far the best alternative I’ve found so far is MS
Excel. Does Ruby or Python have graphics?
This clown speaks for himself
> On Sep 24, 2019, at 12:08 PM, ZB wrote:
>
> On Tue, Sep 24, 2019
On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 11:34:36AM -0400, Wayne Dernoncourt wrote:
> Do you know if this includes BLT?
>
> This clown speaks for himself
If the above was about me, I really have no idea, why you called me like that.
Do you really think that presently TCL has such strong presence among coders
as
Are these different (i.e. updated?) from the versions mirrored already
on ibiblio?
http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/micro/pc-stuff/freedos/files/devel/tcl/
On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 10:27 AM Ben Collver wrote:
>
> Tcl is a script language originally created by Dr. John Ousterhout, who
> is currently a P
Do you know if this includes BLT?
This clown speaks for himself
> On Sep 24, 2019, at 11:27 AM, Ben Collver wrote:
>
> Tcl is a script language originally created by Dr. John Ousterhout, who is
> currently a Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University.
>
> This updated build adds a
On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 08:25:43AM -0700, Ben Collver wrote:
> Tcl is a script language originally created by Dr. John Ousterhout, who is
> currently a Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University.
Thanks!
I'm actually somewhat amazed, how underestimated TCL/Tk nowadays is
--
regards,
Zb
Tcl is a script language originally created by Dr. John Ousterhout, who
is currently a Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University.
This updated build adds a rudimentary [exec] command using code from
mstcl73. This is based on the work of Tom Poindexter, Georg Potthast,
and Viktor Wa
For those that want to play with 86Box, I've created a FreeDOS disk image
for you to play with:
http://www.geneb.org/86box/FreeDOS Machine.7z
I've also got an "ultimate DOS development system" image put together with
a ton of development tools installed on it. Unfortunately, this one boots
MS
Hi
Can you suggest CD-ROM burner software to burn data files from FreeDOS
to CD-R disks ?
Thanks George
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