by bruce » Thu Jul 08, 2004 9:36 am
Worm wrote: wtf?
OS/2 is an operating system.
It lets you run OS/2, DOS, and Win16 programs, and some pretty useless subset of W32 programs. It *is* a better DOS than DOS, and it's about as good a Win 3.1 as WFW 3.11, which is basically what killed it: no one wrote OS/2 programs because it ran Windows programs just fine.
It basically stopped being developed about 1997.
There is a currently-marketed version, called ECS. It's still basically the same stuff as OS/2, but with drivers for slightly more modern video and network cards.
I run ECS on one of my test machines, and I run OS/2 on the machine that supports my P/390. The main thing I noticed last time I installed ECS was how much shit I was willing to put up with in 1997, in terms of getting drivers working, and knowing the IRQs of all my peripheral devices, and being willing to open up the box to manually set jumpers, and crap like that.
You really don't want to run it. I presume there's some equivalent device driver under Windows that will simulate either a modem or a serial connection over a TCP/IP socket, but I don't have any idea what it would be.
Bruce
[quote="Worm"] wtf?[/quote]
OS/2 is an operating system.
It lets you run OS/2, DOS, and Win16 programs, and some pretty useless subset of W32 programs. It *is* a better DOS than DOS, and it's about as good a Win 3.1 as WFW 3.11, which is basically what killed it: no one wrote OS/2 programs because it ran Windows programs just fine.
It basically stopped being developed about 1997.
There is a currently-marketed version, called ECS. It's still basically the same stuff as OS/2, but with drivers for slightly more modern video and network cards.
I run ECS on one of my test machines, and I run OS/2 on the machine that supports my P/390. The main thing I noticed last time I installed ECS was how much shit I was willing to put up with in 1997, in terms of getting drivers working, and knowing the IRQs of all my peripheral devices, and being willing to open up the box to manually set jumpers, and crap like that.
You really don't want to run it. I presume there's some equivalent device driver under Windows that will simulate either a modem or a serial connection over a TCP/IP socket, but I don't have any idea what it would be.
Bruce