Author: Dann Corbit
Date: 12:44:15 01/17/01
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On January 17, 2001 at 15:38:26, Ed Schröder wrote: >On January 17, 2001 at 15:18:24, Dann Corbit wrote: > >>On January 17, 2001 at 15:16:31, Ed Schröder wrote: >>[snip] >>>I have no idea how to trace a TSR program writing outside its own >>>memory. Do you? >> >>Run it in Windows NT. The first time it exceeds its process space, it will >>crash. > >Interesting... > >Will Windows ME do the same? > >Does Dr. Watson also works properly under ME? Windows ME is a piece of junk. I hope you didn't buy a bunch of copies of that for your office. I like Windows NT, Windows 2000 also, but the following I cannot stand: Windows 95 Windows 98 Windows ME All of them are lame animals which need a bullet through the head. Of course, if you like arcade games, then you need something like that. Video games also violate memory all the time and are a prime example of how dangerous people who don't know how to program can be. That's probably somewhat of an exaggeration, but in general the quality of video games is the lowest of all. You might also run suspect programs through BoundsChecker, but I don't know how to do that with a TSR.
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