I have MS Word 6 for dos. Its junk. Only does a fraction
of the same windows version. Wordperfect 6.2 is great. I
bought some extras for it. I added stamp and an update
disk.
cheers
DS
On Sun, 3 May 2020 17:05:11 -0500 Jim Hall writes:
> If you want a distraction-free word processor, you mig
On Mon, May 4, 2020 at 12:07 PM Jim Hall wrote:
> But I'll see if I can ask someone at Microsoft about it. My guess is
> that they provide the download because they don't care about it
> anymore, and no one thought to create a web page for it.
That's my guess. Copyright normally becomes an issu
On Mon, May 4, 2020 at 10:10 AM Robert Riebisch wrote:
>
> Hi Jim,
>
> > If you want a distraction-free word processor, you might also try Microsoft
> > Word for DOS 5.5. Microsoft released this as a free (gratis) download from
>
> I'm not sure about "free (gratis)".
> IIRC Wd55_ben.exe was releas
Yes, my bad. Thanks for the correction
__
Dennis
On Mon, May 4, 2020 at 3:52 AM Harald Arnesen wrote:
>
> dmccunney [04.05.2020 03:52]:
>
> > Have fun. EP was originally written for an 8 bit Atari microcomputer
> ^
>
Hi Jim,
> If you want a distraction-free word processor, you might also try Microsoft
> Word for DOS 5.5. Microsoft released this as a free (gratis) download from
I'm not sure about "free (gratis)".
IIRC Wd55_ben.exe was released to fix a y2k bug. So one would still need
a license (real, physical
If you want a distraction-free word processor, you might also try Microsoft
Word for DOS 5.5. Microsoft released this as a free (gratis) download from
their website. I covered it in this week's FreeDOS video, on our YouTube
channel:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xIXZtThIkF0
Direct download is he
Dennis - Thank you! You've addressed all of my questions and concerns, esp.
abt loading data via USB thumb drive, and the history of EP and it's
relationship to the later packaged version. I'm going to try to build an
8bit machine at some point. As you can probably tell, although I grew up in
the e
dmccunney [04.05.2020 03:52]:
> Have fun. EP was originally written for an 8 bit Atari microcomputer
^
Altair
--
Hilsen Harald
___
Freedos-us
On Sun, May 3, 2020 at 9:54 PM dmccunney wrote:
> On Sun, May 3, 2020 at 8:10 PM Vincent Asaro
> wrote:
> >
> > Dennis - Thank you for all the info!
>
> You're welcome.
>
> > I installed Linux Mint via USB on that machine, I just want to be sure
> FD will "see" the ports, so to speak, but the FD
On Sun, May 3, 2020 at 8:10 PM Vincent Asaro wrote:
>
> Dennis - Thank you for all the info!
You're welcome.
> I installed Linux Mint via USB on that machine, I just want to be sure FD
> will "see" the ports, so to speak, but the FD page sez it's so, so it must be!
Seeing USB ports and being a
Dennis - Thank you for all the info! I installed Linux Mint via USB on that
machine, I just want to be sure FD will "see" the ports, so to speak, but
the FD page sez it's so, so it must be! I found the code for EP on
Archive.org, mimeo of typewritten doc (!) it's abt 4 pages long and I have
every i
PS: Will FD recognize the USB ports? What I'm after is to load/run
WordPerfect, my favorite word processor, which I now miss dearly.
On Sun, May 3, 2020 at 4:11 PM Vincent Asaro wrote:
> Thank you! It's this little jobbie:
>
>
> https://www.amazon.com/HP-11-d010wm-2-16GHz-Certified-Refurbished/d
On Sun, May 3, 2020 at 4:28 PM Vincent Asaro wrote:
>
> Eric,
>
> Thank you for the detailed response! I never played video games, actually,
> I'm just nostalgic for the text interface experience and I really want to use
> WordPerfect again but without installing a VM. As long as I can enter cod
Thank you! It's this little jobbie:
https://www.amazon.com/HP-11-d010wm-2-16GHz-Certified-Refurbished/dp/B07L5QQMJP/ref=sr_1_16?crid=1WS283A5OXV7E&dchild=1&keywords=hp+11+stream+laptop&qid=1588536603&sprefix=hp11+stre%2Caps%2C186&sr=8-16
Linux Mint has very easy BIOS access.
On Sun, May 3, 2020
Eric,
Thank you for the detailed response! I never played video games, actually,
I'm just nostalgic for the text interface experience and I really want to
use WordPerfect again but without installing a VM. As long as I can enter
code and also load DOS programs via USB, I'll get tons of mileage out
Hi Vincent! I would say as long as it has at least a
few megabytes of RAM and at least a 386 CPU, FreeDOS
should run on any PC ;-) Which specific parts are you
worried about? The BIOS will usually support "legacy"
OS such as DOS in helping with USB keyboard and mouse
access and access to any buil
I couldn't find the exact specs on this laptop, but I think you mean this
one:
https://store.hp.com/us/en/pdp/hp-stream-11-pro-g5-notebook-pc-5ga98av-mb
If this has a BIOS, then it should work. Yes, you'd need to try it with the
USB installer.
On Sun, May 3, 2020 at 2:49 PM Vincent Asaro wrote:
I have a little HP11 streaming laptop I'm not using - I used it to try out
Linux Mint, now it's redundant - is it a good candidate for FreeDOS? I'd be
dependant on the USB ports for I/O. Thank you!
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