Message-ID: <371F3884.EF39655D@xoommail.com> Date: Thu, 22 Apr 1999 08:56:04 -0600 From: Ishpeck Organization: Lunaticnologies X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.01 [en] (Win95; I) MIME-Version: 1.0 Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com Subject: Re: Another reason for DOS/FreeDOS/DOS32, etc. X-Priority: 3 (Normal) References: X-Corel-MessageType: EMail Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Reply-To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com This message is perfect flame-bait. I myself like DOS (a lot better than windows) but I'm not sure if you should be sharing this with humanity---humanity just isn't ready for such things. arh14 AT cornell DOT edu wrote: > > Part of what I left out of my short, short message: > > Dos is not secure. > Dos is not sophisticated (relatively speaking). > > BUT > > Dos is SIMPLE > Dos is SMALL > Dos is FAST! (direct hardware access) > Dos is single-user > > The majority of "normal" computer users don't care about users > and permissions and security levels and ownership. They don't need a > multiuser system. Windows itself is complex enough. They just need > something that makes their computer *work* (not even reliable it appears, > although the simpler the OS the easier it is to make reliable!). And > something that is fast is even better. By stripping away the features > that the target audience doesn't care about, one can improve on those > that they do. I think there is plenty of room (if not an imperitive) for > a small, fast, simple OS (preferably 32 bit) that does everything one > wants it to do and nothing one doesn't need. > > My concern is that while people are pitching Linux and other modern > hi-tech operating systems as the Windows/DOS alternative, they miss the > point that some people really *don't* need the included features and > would *gladly* sacrifice them for performance, size, simplicity, etc. I > don't see any player in this field right now. There is no Windows/DOS > alternative that is as simple and fast (not to say Windows is that > fast), not to mention fully backward compatible with all the thousands of > DOS programs. Bigger (in feature count, sophistication) is not necessarily > better. > > Aaron