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Прогрмма теперь полностью бесплатна
Пароль к архивам: MS-DOS
Пароль к архивам: MS-DOS
MS-DOS 6.22 FOR WINDOWS, актуальная версия. Купили:[277]
Перед покупкой полной версии, рекомендуется установить DEMO версию, для проверки совместимости!
Для установки Ms-dos из под Windows, на компьютере должна использоваться микро-программа Bios.
УСТАНОВКА НА HDD:
Устанавливать нужно на любой раздел, первого диска, с файловой системой Fat16. Сам раздел должен быть размером от 20МБ, до 2ГБ
УСТАНОВКА RAM ВЕРСИИ:
Установка проходит автоматически, нечего настраивать не нужно. Система будет грузится с виртуального диска DOS.IMA, который находится после установки, в корне системного диска Windows, из которой проводилась установка.
1)Микропрограмма: bios
2)Память доступно(hdd): от 20МБ, до 2ГБ
3)Архитектура cpu: x86
4)Система Windows: vista, 7, 8, 8.1, 10, 11
5)Права администратора
6)Для работы программы требуется отключить антивирусные программы
7)Некоторые драйвера MS-DOS могут быть
не совместимы с железом компьютера, в
таком случае их следует отключить
-Установлен Volkov Commander (Рус)
-Установлен RAR (Рус)
-Установлен плеер MPXP160
-Установлен Borland Pascal Version 7.0 (Рус)
-Установлен драйвер usb
-Установлен драйвер cga
-Установлен драйвер мышки
-Установлен драйвер cd-rom, дисковод обозначен буквой w
-Установлен драйвер FAT32
-Установлен драйвер NTFS
-Установлен драйвер виртуального ramdisk'а
-Установлен драйвер, поддержки русского языка.
-Установлен замедлитель программ Moslo
-Смена раскладки клавиатуры (shift+shift).
-Замедление программы moslo /5 программа.exe, где 5 это процент от нормальной скорости работы программы
-Для удаления пункта загрузки, из загрузочного меню windows, запустите командную строку, от имени администратора и выполните команды:
1)PATH "%windir%\sysnative"
2)bcdedit /delete {AA48ABEF-FF35-4f09-874F-4CFF92467DC4}
-Инструкция по установки MS-DOS 6.22 из командной строки тут
-Инструкция по работе в MS-DOS тут
1)Для прохождения старых игр:
Duke 3d, doom, warcraft 2 и т.д.
2)Для запуска старых dos программ, не совместимых с новыми версиями Windows и dosbox.
3)Для работы с устаревшим оборудованием и станками, времён dos.
4)Для написания и компиляции программ.
5)Для доступа к системным файлам windows.
6)Для пере-прошивки bios
7)Из ностальгических соображений
Sementsul Maxim 2017-2024
"Внимание:" Форма предназначена для консультирования по вопросам продукции MFW, а также для ваших предложений по проекту MFW!
Вся информация изложенная в справочнике относится только к продуктам данного проекта!
При работе с MS-DOS может быть полезна следующая информация:
Форумы тематических сайтов: FORUM OLD-DOS.RU,
ПОЛИГОН ПРИЗРАКОВ
(до оглавления)
Бесконечная загрузка MS-DOS может произойти в результате зависания, при инициализации драйверов, по причине не совместимости с оборудованием вашего ПК. Также возможен сбой в результате запуска ПО, не совместимого с вашим ПК или содержащим ошибки. Также некоторые программы могут работать не корректно, на современных процессорах, из за быстроты вычислений, такие программы не стоит добавлять в автозапуск, так как они могут стать причиной зависания MS-DOS. (Up to Table of Contents)
Такое может быть если в загрузочном меню windows установлен тайм-аут 0 секунд, из за чего меню не отображается. Исправить эту программу можно путём установки тайм-аут, с помощью bootice, через редактор bcd. Рекомендуется установить время от 10, до 30 секунд. (Up to Table of Contents)
NOTE: These browsers require that you have SLIP, PPP or other TCP/IP networking on your PC. SLIP or PPP can be accomplished over phone lines, but only with the active cooperation of your network provider or educational institution. If you only have normal dialup shell access, your best option at this time is to run Lynx on the Unix (or VMS, or...) system you call, or telnet to a browser if you cannot do so.
Note: NeXT systems can also run X-based browsers using one of the widely used X server products for the NeXT. The browsers listed here, by contrast, are native NeXTStep applications.
These are text-based browsers for Unix (and in some cases also VMS) systems. In many cases your system administrator will have already installed one or more of these packages; check before compiling your own copy.
An excerpt from the NCSA Mosaic FAQ:
NCSA Mosaic requires a direct internet connection to work, but some folks have put together a package that works behind firewalls. This is completely unsupported by NCSA, but here is the latest announcement:
November 15, 1993: C&C Software Technology Center (CSTC) of NEC Systems Lab has made available a version of SOCKS, a package for running Internet clients from behind firewalls without breaching security requirements, that includes a suitably modified version of Mosaic for X 2.0. Beware: such a version is not supported by NCSA; we can't help with questions or problems arising from the modifications made by others. But, we encourage you to check it out if it's interesting to you. Questions and problem notifications can be sent to Ying-Da Lee ([email protected]).
There is also a newer cataloging system called ALIWEB that requires very little effort to maintain and is growing rapidly.
Here are a few such automatic indexes you can search:
Here are two ways:
1. Turn on "load to local disk" in your browser, if it has such an option; then reload images. You'll be prompted for filenames instead of seeing them on the screen. Be sure to shut it off when you're done with it.
2. Choose "view source" and browse through the HTML source; find the URL for the inline image of interest to you; copy and paste it into the "Open URL" window. This should load it into your image viewer instead, where you can save it and otherwise muck about with it.
This piece of wisdom donated by Hunter Monroe:
This section explains how to install sound on a PC which already has a working version of Mosaic for Microsoft Windows. Be warned in advance that the results may be poor.
To get Mosaic to produce sound out of the PC speaker, first, you need a driver for the speaker. You can get the Microsoft speaker driver from the URL ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/Softlib/MSLFILES/SPEAK.EXE or by doing an Archie search to find it somewhere else. SPEAK.EXE is a self-extracting file. Copy the speak.exe file to a new directory, and then type "SPEAK" at the DOS prompt. Do not put the file SPEAKER.DRV in a separate directory from OEMSETUP.INF.
Now, you need to install the driver. In Windows, from the Program Manager choose successively Main/Control Panel/Drivers/Add/Unlisted or updated drivers/(enter path of SPEAK.EXE)/PC Speaker. At this point some strange sounds come out as the driver is initialized. Change the settings to improve the sound quality on the various sounds: tada, chimes, etc. Click OK when you are finished and choose the Restart windows option.
Having installed the speaker driver, you will now get sounds whenever you start Windows, make a mistake, or exit Windows. If you do not want this, from the Main/Control Panel/Sounds menu, make sure there is no X next to "Enable System Sounds."
Now, you need a sound viewer program that Mosaic can call to display sounds. NCSA unfortunately recommend WHAM, which does not work well with a PC speaker. Get the program WPLANY instead. You can find a copy nearby with an Archie search on the string "wplny"; the current version is WPLNY09B.ZIP. For details on archie and other basic issues related to FTP, please read the Usenet newsgroup news.announce.newusers.
Move the zip file to a new directory, and use an unzip program like pkunzip to unzip it, producing the files WPLANY.EXE and WPLANY.DOC. Then edit the MOSAIC.INI file to remove the "REM" before the line "TYPE9=audio/basic". Then, you need lines in the section below that read something like: audio/basic="c:\wplany\wplany.exe %ls" audio/wav="c:\wplany\wplany.exe %ls" where you have filled in the correct path for wplany.exe. The MOSAIC.INI file delivered with Mosaic may have NOTEPAD.EXE on the audio/basic line, but this will not work. Now, restart Mosaic, and you should now be able to produce sounds. To check this, with Mosaic choose File/Local File/\WINDOWS\*.WAV and then try to play TADA.WAV. Then, you might try the Mosaic Demo document for some .AU sounds, but you are lucky if your speaker produces something you can understand.
This answer provided by Michael Grady ([email protected]):
The version of Mosaic for X has "wais client" code built-in to it. This was relatively easy for the developers to do, because there was already a set of library routines for talking to WAIS available for Unix as "public domain" (freeWAIS). I don't think there is such a library of routines for PC/Windows or Mac, which would make it much more difficult for the Mosaic versions for Windows and the Mac to add "wais client" capability. Therefore, at least for now, neither the Windows or Mac versions of Mosaic support direct query of a WAIS server (i.e. can act as wais clients themselves).
Answer provided by Ronald E. Daniel ([email protected]):
Mosaic only looks at the .mime.types file if it has no idea what the document's type is. This is actually a very rare situation. Essentially all servers now use the HTTP/1.0 protocol, which means that they tell Mosaic (or other browsers) what the document's MIME Content-type is. The servers use a file very much like Mosaic's .mime.types file to infer the Content-type from the filename's extension.
It is pretty simple to find out if this really is the problem. Use telnet to talk to the server and find out if it is assigning a MIME type to the document in question. Here's an example, looking at the home page for my server. (idaknow: is my shell prompt)
idaknow: telnet www.acl.lanl.gov 80 // Connect to the httpd server Trying 128.165.148.3 ... Connected to www.acl.lanl.gov. Escape character is '^]'. HEAD /Home.html HTTP/1.0 // replace Home.html with your document // you supply the blank line HTTP/1.0 200 OK // the rest of this comes from the server Date: Wednesday, 25-May-94 19:18:11 GMT Server: NCSA/1.1 MIME-version: 1.0 Content-type: text/html // Here's the MIME Content-type Last-modified: Monday, 16-May-94 16:21:58 GMT Content-length: 1727 idaknow:In the example above, /Home.html will get http://www.acl.lanl.gov/Home.html.
Normally servers will be configured to supply a Content-type of text/plain if they don't know what else to do. If this is the problem you are having, take a look at the TypesConfig documentation for NCSA's httpd. You can have the server look at the filename extension, supply the correct Content-type, then use your local .mailcap file to tell Mosaic what viewer to use to look at the document.
But others have written simple depth-first searches which, at the worst, can bring servers to their knees in minutes by recursively downloading information from CGI script-based pages that contain an infinite number of possible links. (Often robots can't realize this!) Imagine what happens when a robot decides to "index" the CONTENTS of several hundred mpeg movies. Shudder.
The moral: a robot that does what you want may already exist; if it doesn't, please study the document World Wide Web Robots, Wanderers and Spiders (URL is: http://web.nexor.co.uk/mak/doc/robots/robots.html) and learn about the emerging standards for exclusion of robots from areas in which they are not wanted. You can also read about existing robots there.
#!/bin/sh echo \Then add the following line to your .rnmac file (create it if you don't already have one):> .article.html cat >> .article.html echo \>> .article.html lynx .article.html < /dev/tty rm .article.html
W |readwebpost %CNow, when you press "W" while reading a post in rn, a message will be sent to Lynx, and the links enclosed in it will be live.
Larry W. Virden provides the following version which invokes Mosaic instead, and is also capable of communicating with an already-running copy of Mosaic instead of launching another. (You can use the same rn macro as above, invoking "goto-xm" instead of "readwebpost".) Read the comments for details on the assumptions made by the script.
#! /bin/sh # goto-xm, by Joseph T. Buck# Modified heavily by Larry W. Virden # Script for use with newsreaders such as trn. Piping the article # through this command causes xmosaic to pop up, pointing to the # article. If an existing xmosaic (version 1.1 or later) exists, # the USR1 method will be used to cause it to point to the correct # article, otherwise a new one will be started. # assumptions: ps command works as is on SunOS 4.1.x, may need changes # on other platforms. URL=`/bin/grep '^Message-ID:' | /bin/sed -e 's/.*</news:/' -e 's/>.*//'` if [ "X$URL" = "X" ]; then echo "USAGE: $0 [goto] [once] < USENET_msg" >&2 exit 1 fi pid=`ps -xc | egrep '[Mm]osaic' | awk 'NR == 1 {print $1}'` p=`which Mosaic` gfile=/tmp/Mosaic.$pid $p "$URL" & if [ "$#" -gt 0 ] ; then if [ "$1" = "goto" -o "$1" = "same" ] ; then shift echo "goto" > $gfile else echo "newwin" > $gfile fi else echo "newwin" > $gfile fi /bin/awk 'END { printf "'"$URL"'" }' </dev/null >> $gfile trap "echo signal encountered" 30 kill -USR1 $pid exit 0
Если вы планируете установить MS-DOS из под windows, спомощью MS-DOS FOR WINDOWS, то в этом случае можно установить только одну копию системы MS-DOS. Это касается как MFW HDD, так и MFW RAM. Также не получится установить одновременно MFW HDD и MFW RAM. Если вы установили одну из версий MFW, и хотите установить другую версию, то перед установкой иной версии нужно удалить загрузочную запись предыдущей версии, сделать это можно выполнив команды 2 команда, в командной строке, запущенной от имени администратора:
1) Команда:
PATH "%windir%\sysnative"
2) Команда:
bcdedit /delete {AA48ABEF-FF35-4f09-874F-4CFF92467DC4}Для того чтобы иметь несколько копий системы MS-DOS, можно создать загрузочные флешки, с помощью программы MS-DOS BOOT FROM USB.
A beginner's guide to HTML is available at the URL http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/General/Internet/WWW/HTMLPrimer.html. You can also find a plain text version (at the URL ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/ncsapubs/WWW/HTMLPrimer.txt) and a compressed Postscript version (at the URL ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/ncsapubs/WWW/HTMLPrimer.txt). (Since the latter two are FTP URLs, you can fetch them by hand using FTP if you do not yet have a web browser.)
There is also a good set of HTML documentation available at the URL http://www.ucc.ie/info/net/htmldoc.html.
There is also an HTML primer by Nathan Torkington at the URL http://www.vuw.ac.nz/who/Nathan.Torkington/ideas/www-html.html.
Fans of the EMACS editor can use EMACS and html-helper-mode , an EMACS "mode" for HTML editing (URL is http://www.reed.edu/~nelson/tools/).
There is also another Emacs HTML mode, html-mode.el (URL is ftp://ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Web/elisp/html-mode.el).
For Microsoft Windows users, there is an editor
called HTML Assistant with features to assist in the creation
of HTML documents. It can be had by anonymous FTP from
ftp.cs.dal.ca
in the directory
/htmlasst/
. Read the README.1ST file in this
directory for information on which files to download.
A WYSIWYG editor for the Web, *SoftQuad HoTMetaL*, is available for downloading at NCSA and other Mosaic server sites. Many mirror sites exist; if you can't get through to one, try another, don't give up! That's what mirror sites are for. (Also be sure to use the copy closest to you geographically if possible.)
Known mirrors:
An editor for all X users: TkWWW (listed above under X browsers) supports WYSIWYG HTML editing; and since it's a browser, you can try out links immediately after creating them.
Also for X users, there is a package called htmltext which supports WYSIWYG HTML editing. More information is available at the URL http://web.cs.city.ac.uk/homes/njw/htmltext/htmltext.html.
For Macintosh users, there is evidently a near-WYSIWYG package called HTML Editor (URL is http://dragon.acadiau.ca:1667/~giles/HTML_Editor).
Also for Macintosh users, the BBEdit HTML extensions allow the BBEdit and BBEdit Lite text editors for the Macintosh to conveniently edit HTML documents. (URL is http://www.uji.es/bbedit-html-extensions.html.) You can also obtain the extensions package by anonymous ftp from sumex-aim.stanford.edu as info-mac/bbedit-html-ext-b3.hqx.
There is an alternative BBEdit extension package available as well; it is available by FTP at the URL ftp://ctipsych.york.ac.uk/CTI_FTP/pub/BBEdit/BBEdit_HTML_Tools.sea.hqx.
NCSA's List of Filters and Editors, for which the URL is http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/SDG/Software/Mosaic/Docs/faq-software.html#editors, mentions several editors, including two for MS Windows. In some cases, the "editor" amounts to a set of macros for an existing word processor, which can provide a near-WYSIWYG environment.
Note that this URL contains uppercase and lowercase letters; certain operating systems won't allow mixed case on the command line, or will only allow it if it is quoted (VMS), so if you are launching Lynx or another client and specifying a URL at the command line, try quoting the URL in double-quotes ("URL").
Another option, if you have an SGML editor, is to use it with the HTML
DTD
Rich Brandwein and Mike Sendall's List at CERN. The URL is
http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Tools/Filters.html.
(Note that this
URL contains uppercase and lowercase letters; certain
operating systems such as VMS require you to quote
mixed-case URLs when launching a borwser from the command line.
This is NOT a bug in the browser.)
There is also a Word for Windows template for writing HTML documents,
available at the URL
http://www.gatech.edu/word_html/release.htm.
There are really two issues here: how to indicate in HTML that
you want an image to be clickable, and how to configure your
server to do something with the clicks returned by Mosaic,
Chimera, and other clients capable of delivering them.
You can read about
image maps and the NCSA server at the URL
http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/docs/setup/admin/Imagemap.html.
Such links are useful when a form is intended to perform
some action on the server machine without sending new information to
the client, or when a user has clicked in an undefined area in
an image map; these are just two possibilities.
Rob McCool
of NCSA provided the following wisdom on the subject:
HTTP now supports a response code of 204, which is no operation. Some
browsers such as Mosaic/X 2.* support it. To use it, make your script a nph
script and output an HTTP/1.0 204 header. Something like:
(You can learn more about nph scripts from the
NCSA server documentation
at the URL http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/docs.) Essentially they
are scripts that handle their own HTTP response codes.
Use the <!-- tag at the beginning of EACH line commented out;
close this for EACH line with the --> tag. Note that comments
do not nest, and the sequence "--" may not appear inside a
comment except as part of the closing --> tag.
You should not try to use this to "comment out"
HTML that would otherwise be shown to the user, since some
browsers (notably Mosaic) will still pay attention to tags
inside the comment and close it prematurely.
Thanks to Joe English for clearing up this issue.
However, there is a way to use HTML Level 3 tables now and
convert them automatically to HTML, allowing you to design
proper tables and install those pages directly when
table support arrives in the majority of clients.
You can do this using the
html+tables package, by Brooks Cutter ([email protected]),
which is available for anonymous ftp from sunsite.unc.edu in
the directory pub/packages/infosystems/WWW/tools/html+tables.shar.
This package requires the shell language Perl, which is primarily
used on Unix systems but is also available for other systems
(such as MSDOS machines). html+tables accepts HTML Level 3 and outputs
html using the <PRE>...</PRE> construct to represent tables,
allowing you to write HTML Level 3 now, knowing that it will look
better when clients are ready for it.
However, most clients support only a handful of HTML Level 3 features
(such as forms in Mosaic) at this time.
To learn more about HTML Level 3, you can examine a
draft specification for it (at the URL
ftp://ds.internic.net/internet-drafts/draft-raggett-www-html-00.txt)
or a Postscript version of the same draft (at the URL
ftp://ds.internic.net/internet-drafts/draft-raggett-www-html-00.ps).
You can also access information about new developments
in HTML at the CERN server (at the URL
http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Markup/Markup.html).
(HTML Level 1 is the original version. HTML Level 2 is essentially
the same, but with the addition of forms.)
There is a document explaining transparent GIFs available
at the URL
http://melmac.harris-atd.com/transparent_images.html. You can
fetch the program
giftrans by anonymous ftp from ftp.rz.uni-karlsruhe.de at
the path /pub/net/www/tools/giftrans.c.
JPEG does a better job with realistic images such as scanned
photographs. Most browsers cannot handle inline JPEGs, however,
so you must link to them as external images (using a regular
<A HREF...> instead of <IMG SRC...>.
GIF does a better job with crisp, sharp images, such as those
typically used to construct buttons, graphs and the like.
All browsers that can display graphics at all can display
GIFs inline.
To find out more, use the web. This FAQ hopefully provides
enough information for you to locate and install a browser
on your system. If you have system specific questions regarding
FTP, networking and the like, please consult newsgroups
relevant to your particular hardware and operating
system!
Once you're up and running, you may wish to consult the
World Wide Web Primer by Nathan Torkington. It is available
at the URL
http://www.vuw.ac.nz/who/Nathan.Torkington/ideas/www-primer.html.
Later you may return to this FAQ for answers to some of the
more advanced questions. I encourage you to check out the
changes listed early in the document each time the FAQ
appears.
(Up to Table of Contents)
Так-как программа не имеет цифровой подписи,5.3.3: Converting other formats to HTML
There is a collection of filters for converting
your existing documents (in TeX and other non-HTML formats)
into HTML automatically, including filters that can allow
more or less WYSIWYG editing using various word processors:
5.4: How do I publicize my work?
There are several things you can do to publicize your new HTML server
or other offering:
(Up to Table of Contents)
5.5: Can I buy space on an existing server?
Yes, you can. A list of sites offering WWW space for lease
is available (at the URL
http://ginko.cecer.army.mil:8000/hypernews/www-leasing.html).
5.6.1: How do I set up a clickable image map?
5.6.2: How do I make a "link" that doesn't load a new page?
Yechezkal-Shimon Gutfreund ([email protected]) wrote:
: Ok, here is another bizzare request from me:
: I am currently running scripts which I "DO NOT" want to return
: any visible result. That is, not text/plain, not text/HTML, not
: image/gif. The entire results are the side effects of the
: script and nothing should be returned to the viewer.
: It would be nice to have an internally supported null viewer
: so that I could do this, more "cleanly" (ok, ok, I hear your groans).
HTTP/1.0 204 No response
Server: Myscript/NCSA httpd 1.1
5.6.3: Where can I learn how to create fill-out forms?
You can read about the Common Gateway Interface
(at the URL
http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu:80/cgi/). In addition to documenting
the standard interface for which scripts can now be written for
both NCSA and CERN-derived servers, these pages also cover
HTML forms and how to handle the results on the server side.
5.6.3.1: How can I create hidden fields in forms (keeping state)?
Use INPUT TYPE=hidden
. An example:
<INPUT TYPE=hidden NAME=state VALUE="hidden info to be returned with form">
By now, most if not all browsers can handle the hidden type. Note that
"hidden" doesn't mean "secret"; the user can always click on
"view source".
5.6.4: How do I comment an HTML document?
5.6.5: How can I create decent-looking tables and stop using <PRE>...
</PRE>?
Tables are a standard feature in HTML Level 3, a
new version of HTML. Unfortunately, they are at present
implemented only
by the Viola and Emacs-W3
browsers, to my knowledge.
5.6.6: What is HTML Level 3 and where can I learn more about it?
HTML Level 3, also known as HTML+, is an enhanced version of
HTML designed to address some of the limitations of HTML. HTML Level 3
supports true tables, right-justified text,
centered text, line breaks that do not double space, and many other
desired features.
5.6.7: How can I make transparent GIFs?
Transparent GIFs are useful because they appear to blend in smoothly
with the user's display, even if the user has set a background
color that differs from that the developer expected.
5.6.8: How come mailto: URLs don't work?
The mailto:
URL is an innovation found in Lynx and
a few other browsers. It is not yet found in Mosaic, the most
popular browser. Hopefully it will be present in future versions.
In the meantime, you can set up forms which send mail
to you; there is documentation on this at the URL
http://siva.cshl.org/email/index.html.
5.6.9: How can I restrict and control access to my server?
All major servers have features that allow you to limit access
to particular sites, and many clients have authentication features
that allow you to identify specific users. There is a
tutorial on security and user authentication with the NCSA
server and Mosaic available, written by Marc Andreessen
(URL is http://wintermute.ncsa.uiuc.edu:8080/auth-tutorial/tutorial.html).
See your server documentation for further information.
5.6.10: Which format is better for WWW image purposes, JPEG or GIF?
5.6.11: How can I mirror part of another server?
Scripts are available to do this, but at this time they are not very
friendly to the server you are attempting to mirror; their behavior
resembles that of the more poorly written WWW robots.
If you are trying to improve access times to a distant server, you
will likely find the "proxy" capabilities of
CERN's WWW server to be a more
effective and general solution to your problem.
6: Законность MS-DOS FOR WINDOWS
MS-DOS FOR WINDOWS является полностью законным проектом. Автор проекта занимается продажей копий программы, которая является его личной интеллектуальной собственностью. Мы не продаем MS-DOS, мы продаём программу установки этой системы, а также настройки к ней. Мы честно платим налоги и не нарушаем закон.7: I want to know more
8: Credits
а так-же скомпилирована не стандартными методами,
на неё могут ругаться антивирусы
[X]
Демонстрационный запуск MS-DOS 6.22...
Установленная система MS-DOS:
Окно установщика MS-DOS FOR WINDOWS HDD:
Окно установщика MS-DOS FOR WINDOWS RAM:
Окно установщика MS-DOS FOR WINDOWS R+H: