There is Acrobat Reader 1.0 for MSDOS but it does not support modern PDF
format. I'm sure it has evolved so much that none of the current PDFs work
with it anyway.
It's available though on winworldpc for download and check.
If that doesn't work then I assume porting some open source to DOS is the
or Sun, Jan 24, but I haven't
> decided the exact date yet. (I'm leaning to the latter date, based on other
> projects.)
>
> Jim
>
>
> On Wed, Dec 16, 2020 at 2:39 PM Hollowone PL
> wrote:
>
>> Yep, would be great to give people heads-up to plan availability for
Yep, would be great to give people heads-up to plan availability for the
meeting.
Thanks,
/h1
On Mon, Dec 14, 2020 at 1:08 AM Jim Hall wrote:
> Sorry we missed you. I think we'll make this a regular thing. So we'll do
> another one in January.
>
> Maybe on a monthly schedule for now. Since
I have dual boot FreeDOS and WIndows 7 on one spare retro-ish computer that
I dedicated to it.
When on WIndows I'm connected to the network and also I can natively see
FAT32 partition that is represented by FreeDOS.
Then my custom UEFI boot manager loads FreeDOS with all the stuff desired
for a
Yep, that is correct. Due to it, I had to recompile my own OpenWatcom build
using a different extender for runtime to continue using it (which is fine).
I also continue investigating the root cause of that limitation. Just spoke
to rEFInd developer to assess his opinion. Seems that he shares one
This is a very interesting point regarding the keyboard.
I have a standard USB keyboard (actually from Microsoft) that is connected
to this iMac and standard HIC USB mouse that works with I think everything
(including a few FPGA computers I run retro stuff on.
With such a setup, the keyboard
and other elements of true driver implementation are not there. Do you know
anything about working HD Audio software for DOS?
-
Best,
hollowone
On Thu, Nov 12, 2020 at 11:28 AM TK Chia wrote:
> Hello Hollowone PL,
>
> > With this I have few starter questi
:53 PM Hollowone PL wrote:
> Thanks for your replies, to address your comments in one message:
>
> *[1] How did I install FreeDOS on iMac*
> That was relatively easy once I installed this boot manager:
> https://www.rodsbooks.com/refind/
> With it I can install Linux, Win
Hello everybody,
I just joined this newsletter and I hope the community, I had a few tries
with FreeDOS but mostly in the VM and mostly for the use cases that DOSBOX
handles much better.
None of these are related to my current deployment, which was hacking the
UEFI boot manager that comes with