Or you could buy a real copy of DOS. IBM still makes it and sells it. Somewhere in the neighborhood of $50. Guaranteed to be far faster than an emulator version. Also Y2K compliant, and I believe it also is capable of 32 bit protected mode operation. > -----Original Message----- > From: KRFinch@dstsystems.com [mailto:KRFinch@dstsystems.com] > Sent: Wednesday, January 09, 2002 4:34 PM > To: kclug@kclug.org > Subject: Re: a question about DOS emulation in Win XP > > > > SUPPOSEDLY, the DOS emulator in WinXP is far better and more > compatible > than those in Win2k, NT, or even ME. I was shown a > screenshot once of Doom > running in a window under XP, something that would cause any of the > previously mentioned Win versions to crash. No experience > with it myself, > but if I had to guess based on what I have read, I would say > that a simple > DOS program would likely run fine under WinXP. > > That having been said, I wonder why on earth anyone would pay > so much for > something to have to do so little. (I guess if you had to > buy a new PC, > and XP was preinstalled as a part of the "Microsoft Tax > Package", but other > than that...) In any case, the program would probably work > equally well > under Win95's or 98's DOS mode, and either of those could be > had used for > less than a tenth of the price of XP. It would probably run > faster too, > and on slower hardware. WinXP is a P-I-G, and you need about > an 800Mhz > processor and 256MB of RAM to get reasonable performance out > of it. You > can get acceptable performance (with many > non-graphic-intensive programs) > in Win95's DOS mode on a non-MMX P-50 with 32MB installed. > Depending on > the program, you could probably run it under DOS in Win3.11 > on a 486 and > still get acceptable performance. > > As a footnote, the Gartner Group found WinXP to be 30% more resource > intensive than Win2k in all areas. Win2k was about 50% more resource > intensive than WinNT4.0 in similar tests. That P-350 might > have been a > screamer with NT4.0, but these days it has a hard time running Office. > Food for thought... > > Hope this helps! > > Kevin Finch > Network Administrator > DST Systems, Inc. > 816/435-6039 > krfinch@dstsystems.com > > > > > > majordomo@kclug.org >