Conversation
Notices
-
LinuxWalt (@lnxw48a1) {3EB165E0-5BB1-45D2-9E7D-93B31821F864} (lnxw48a1@nu.federati.net)'s status on Sunday, 28-Apr-2019 18:26:43 UTC LinuxWalt (@lnxw48a1) {3EB165E0-5BB1-45D2-9E7D-93B31821F864} @1iceloops123 Win9x ( #Win95 / #Win98 / #Win98SE / #WinMe ) was just an add-on atop a 32-bit reinterpretation of #MS-DOS.
Everything good (and bad) about DOS was right there and easily accessible.-
LinuxWalt (@lnxw48a1) {3EB165E0-5BB1-45D2-9E7D-93B31821F864} (lnxw48a1@nu.federati.net)'s status on Sunday, 28-Apr-2019 18:28:52 UTC LinuxWalt (@lnxw48a1) {3EB165E0-5BB1-45D2-9E7D-93B31821F864} @1iceloops123 And the earliest release of Win95 didn't even have a reinterpretation. It ran directly atop 16-bit DOS. -
LinuxWalt (@lnxw48a1) {3EB165E0-5BB1-45D2-9E7D-93B31821F864} (lnxw48a1@nu.federati.net)'s status on Sunday, 28-Apr-2019 18:45:52 UTC LinuxWalt (@lnxw48a1) {3EB165E0-5BB1-45D2-9E7D-93B31821F864} @1iceloops123 #WinNT was basically a parallel track. Businesses were using NT while home users were on 9x. #WinXP was when NT came to home users.
-