From: mapson AT mapson DOT com (mapson) Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.programmer,comp.os.msdos.djgpp Subject: Re: FreeDOS or OpenDOS question Date: Sun, 05 Oct 1997 02:50:28 GMT Organization: Yale University Lines: 40 Message-ID: <3437006c.105555075@news.cis.yale.edu> References: <342bdad9 DOT 72289929 AT news DOT demon DOT co DOT uk> <342cea41 DOT 748517 AT news DOT caiw DOT nl> <3436d35f DOT 373316 AT news DOT highfiber DOT com> NNTP-Posting-Host: slip-ppp-node-02.cs.yale.edu To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp Precedence: bulk On Sat, 04 Oct 1997 23:39:18 GMT, raster AT highfiber DOT com (Charles Dye) wrote: >On Sat, 27 Sep 1997 11:14:51 GMT, g*m*bok AT hotmail DOT com (Gerard Bok) >wrote: > >>On Thu, 25 Sep 1997 23:28:24 GMT, alex DOT buell AT tahallah DOT demon DOT co DOT uk >>(Alex Buell) wrote: >> >>>Does either FreeDOS or OpenDOS (from Caldera) supports multibooting? >>> >>>I.e, could I install it on an extended logical partition a la OS/2 or >>>Linux? > >>As far as I know, OpenDos doesn't come with its own multiboot utility >>but using OS/2 multiboot you can choose between OS/2 and OpenDos. > >Actually, the latest version of OpenDOS (the 7.02 beta) *does* include >a multiboot manager. Haven't tried it myself, so I can't say how well >it works. What is the difference between these two? I read the FAQs from both, but somehow didn't come away with a very salient notion of why they are developing separately. Particularly with Caldera's OpenDOS- is it a "for profit" item, or is it not? Offering an "evaluation copy" sounds like shareware to me! But "eventually offering the source" does not. I like the idea of these OS being available... not because I love DOS so much, per se, but because DOS has this enviable trio of properties: 1)an OS small enough to fit on a floppy disk, 2)has over a decade's wealth of some of the worlds best [game] programs to draw from, 3) runs on every x86 processor. Strikes me as the perfect portable OS for gamers- i.e., if you have Linux or NT or some peculiar system on your x86 machine, just pop a boot disk in, a floppy, and you can run... Quake, Doom, Longbow,commanche,IndyCar... How about a souped-up version that runs 32-bit flat-memory-model, but still somehow handles stuff for old DOS? Is that a possibility? in the near future? could it still fit on a floppy? ;)