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Subject: Re: Dos will never completely die out

Author: Komputer Korner

Date: 21:00:30 11/19/98

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On November 19, 1998 at 15:03:04, Dave Gomboc wrote:

>On November 19, 1998 at 14:32:44, Komputer Korner wrote:
>
>>On November 19, 1998 at 04:49:14, Albert Silver wrote:
>>
>>>On November 18, 1998 at 20:14:37, wayne johnson wrote:
>>>
>>>>Microsoft dos may end; but, there is still alot of dos machines being used.
>>>>I have a few dos chess programs that compute much faster and more
>>>>accurately--then supposedly better windows counter-parts--when I run them on a
>>>>486 intel 100mz chip. There are quite a few chessplayers at my local club who
>>>>only own an ibm xt and they seem to do just as well in their ratings. So if you
>>>>have children and can't really afford a IBM clone that runs at 300mz--and the
>>>>professional chess software programs that also cost alot of green. I don't
>>>>forsee a complete end to dos.....
>>>
>>>Quite true. Here in Brazil, apart from the really rich companies, 386's and
>>>486's are the norm. Even a few innovative (for Rio) newstands control their
>>>sales and inventory with a low-end machine. Besides, the future of OSs seems to
>>>be either limited to bloatware or Linux (though music program specialists seem
>>>to like beOS). Time will tell. For a funny article on the upcoming Windows 2000,
>>>you might like to see John Dvorak's article in PC Magazine Online:
>>>http://www8.zdnet.com/pcmag/insites/dvorak/jd.htm
>>>
>>>                              Albert Silver
>>
>>Isn't it true that to load an OS on a PC one needs the CDROM drivers and the
>>only way to do this on machines that don't boot from the CDROM is to first load
>>the CDROM drivers via DOS?
>>--
>>Komputer Korner
>
>Maybe for some end-of-life hardware.  Any reasonably new CD-ROM drive supports
>ATAPI, and as you already know, if the BIOS on the machine is up to it, bootable
>CD-ROM is available, so the OS software can start installing without any
>diddling around.  If the BIOS doesn't support bootable CD-ROM, you can of course
>still boot from a floppy.  That is usually a DOS floppy (as you suggest above),
>but it doesn't have to be.  It could be a boot image for any OS (Linux comes to
>mind as an alternate to DOS).
>
>Dave Gomboc

Okay thanks for the CD lesson. However doesn't WIN 9X first boot to DOS before
starting WIN 9X? So doesn't this mean that DOS is tied up with WIN 9X and can't
be separated from it?
--
Komputer Korner



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