Grzyb wrote on 2025-01-27, 07:06:
Personally, I like using DOS 6 because I don't *need* to remember the commands.
It's the first version of DOS with complete online(*) documentation - no need to dig in the pile of dusty books, no need to search the web for scanned manuals...
Good point. Though Jackhead has the big physical books of DOS 5 in reach, so..
Anyway, what I meant was that I do personally prefer trying to understand one DOS properly,
rather than messing a round with a dozen of versions all day long.
That being said, I think it's good to have a small collection stored away for trouble-shooting.
Such as (incomplete list):
- MS-DOS 2.11 for really old games, Windows 1.x
- DOS Plus 1.2 for running DOS 2.11 and CP/M-86 programs on FAT formatted media (10 or 20 MB HDD, 360 KB floppy), it can be a bridge between both worlds
- PC-DOS 3.30 for 80s GEM, Windows 2.x, old disk utilities (it's an allrounder)
- Compaq DOS 3.31 for XT users in need of gigantic 512MB partitions
- MS-DOS 5 for Windows 3.0 (has WINA20.386 file needed for 386 mode) and GeoWorks 1.x/2.x (they use a patch for DOS 6+)
- MS-DOS 6.x for Windows 3.1x and WfW (has Windows utilities)
- The forgotten MS-DOS 6.20 for users that build period-correct PCs from 1993 and thus avoid 6.22
- MS-DOS 6.22 for Windows f. Workgroups 3.11 (are an couple)
Edit: Interesting! I've just read in an old review about "MS EM" that DOS 2.11 was slower processing than DOS 3.2 (then current)..
Edit: By the way, MS-DOS 3.2/3.3 has a bug in FDISK. If HDD is larger than 32MB, data corruption happens. IBM PC-DOS 3.30 doesn't have this bug. It just stops at 32MB size, partition will be fine.
DR DOS 5/6 and Novell DOS 7 are also good to have, they were the underdogs so to say.
Especially NV7 had useful P2P networking features (DOS/Win3x), like Warp 3 Connect or WfW 3.11.
I do like to think these three are special editions, like Pokèmon Yellow/Crystal/Emerald.. ;)
PTS/Paragon DOS for experimental builds.
Lots of switches in startup files. Is said to be made in assembly.
PC-DOS 2000 seems to be popular among Turbo XT and hot-rod PC fans, too.
It can make good use of UMBs and EMS cards, I assume.
It has features more modern than found in MS-DOS 6.22, newer DOS core.
But MS-DOS 5.0a is fine and solid, really. In the world of the user, it was the next big release straight after DOS 3.30.
Many XT users in 1990 had used or known about MS-DOS 5.
I suppose that most got hold of a copy within months.
Exchanging "backup copies" and borrowing "start-up disks" was very common back then. ;)
PS: Wendin DOS and PC-MOS/386 are fine for those users who want to run their IBM PC or AT/386 like a little mainframe.
Terminals can be attached, DOS programs can be multitasked (useful for running a lot of small utilities, text mode games, compilers, GW-BASIC etc).
A 386 is recommended because of better memory managment.
Otherwise, same memory constraints as when using TopView or DESQView.
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