Reply 20 of 35, by iRelyt
- Rank
- Newbie
I've already tried dosemu...failed, I might just run DOS on the other hard drive on this one...where would I find DOS? I don't have a floppy drive either, so it would have to be on CD somehow..
I've already tried dosemu...failed, I might just run DOS on the other hard drive on this one...where would I find DOS? I don't have a floppy drive either, so it would have to be on CD somehow..
post content of "DOSBox Status Window"
enclose your dosbox's config file
/me rolls his eyes at robertmo's post which is unhelpful and utterly pointless in the context of this thread
iRelyt: MS-DOS is copyrighted software. You can probably buy original DOS floppies at eBay or similar sites. AFAIK DOS has never been released on CD. You could try FreeDOS, it comes as floppy images or a CD image. FreeDOS is not 100% compatible to MS-DOS though.
Well...I've tried FreeDOS before, I can Never get it to install properly or run properly, I'll try and find MS-DOS...I'm sure I could find it, I have my methods, of which I'm not going to say cause I don't want angry emails from Microsoft... 😀 I'll probably find it, getting it to install without floppies, that's another challenge...are there only really MS-DOS and FreeDOS?
No, but AFAIK, all other PC-DOS systems are commercial (DR-DOS, PTS-DOS, ...)
And, installing MS-DOS without a floppy could get quite tricky. You can try bruning a bootable CD with 1.44M-floppy-emulation el-torito boot-image of the first installation disk and put the files of the other disks directly on the CD, /maybe/ this works ... (should be a lot simpler to install FreeDOS using an official installation CD. Or grab a 1.44M FDD somewhere and hook it up)
The part about burning the CD with floppy emulation...how would I do that? Any program that does that has to run on Linux by the way...
man cdrecord.
wrote:/me rolls his eyes at robertmo's post which is unhelpful and utterly pointless in the context of this thread
How can you say anything if you don't even know his dosbox's configuration...
Easy, I'm using my brain. Plus, I'm actually _reading_ what people are posting. The OP has stated that he's using old hardware. No amount of conf tweaking or status windows analysis will change that. Note that the original problem has been solved some posts ago and we're dealing with other issues now.
games he mentioned are for 286 and 386 so his PC should be enough.
also his previous conf was totally ducked up
and also running emulator inside another emulator doesn't help performance too..
and also running emulator inside another emulator doesn't help performance too..
???
If you're referring to WINE: WINE is not an emulator (W=Wine I=Is N=Not an E=Emulator, that's the official project title). Besides, the OP doesn't run DOSBox in WINE. In one of the first posts he describes how he has installed DOSBox via apt-get, so it stands to reason that he's using the native Linux version.
And now I will stop explaining the contents of this thread (; .
Back on topic: I do think the PC is too slow to run "demanding" games (=3D, the release year is irrelevant). I presume we're talking about an Athlon (running at low Mhz too), and that CPU is not exactly a computing powerhouse.
My Athlon from 2004 almost runs Quake acceptable @640x400 😜
1+1=10
In DOSBox?! Well I'm (more or less) making an educated guess here of course. When i take my old machine (P4/2.6Ghz) which is the first machine I've run DOSBox on as a reference point, then "go back" several CPU generations and reduce the CPU speed, add the fact that the OP is running Linux which is not exactly optimized for gaming etc., I come to the conclusion that the system could be too slow to run DOSBox reliably with fluid graphics and good sound. I could be wrong of course.
So due to my crappy computer's lack of power...it can't make most games in DosBOX run smooth And sound decent?
I've already told you how.
1+1=10
When i take my old machine (P4/2.6Ghz) which is the first machine I've run DOSBox on
DOSBox has improved since then.
1+1=10