I don't think at this point it would be considered pirating widows3.1 or 95. If i remember correctly after a certain age they release interest of sorts. That coupled with the fact that it's not even installed on a tangible machine....
I forgot. If you can install a 32 bit version of your os on another partition on the same computer it should work still. 32 bit versions still have the ability to emulate 16 bit stuff. Although some of it is a bit buggy...
Last edited by Niku-Sama; 02-05-2015 at 01:49 AM.
Good points all around. I did some digging, and perhaps the best alternative really if you want to put the work in up front, would be to make a DOS Box install that fires up Win3.11 or Win95(A or B, C has errors.)
Under that environment you could basically just whatever the hell you want really as long as DOSBox doesn't have a compatibility with a specific game or application and all in a nice 1024x768 window on your larger desktop.
I'm thinking I may go poking around and see if I can make a Win95 install as that would be excellent. That too would allow my williams pinball classics (has 4 nice tables, this is pre Pinball Arcade stuff) to work along with Wing Commander Kilrathi Saga, C&C, Sim City, and whatever else is being a bitch.
Of course, there's also the possibility of getting an old Compaq Presario and a 17" CRT if space isn't an issue...
It is. I've got a spare quad core 32bit computer in the back I could throw XP on but I have nowhere to set that up.
I think paying the $3 for dosbox turbo may be a good choice. No windows junk, but DOS games would be very doable. I saw this one writeup saying that the tablet I have would be like the equal of a Pentium75mhz with the emulation overhead.
Windows 3.x in DOSBox is probably an excellent way to run 16-bit Windows games, but Win9x in DOSBox is still kind of dodgy. You definitely want to use the latest "Daum" build if you go that way. PCem is also making pretty good progress and might be a better option. Many sing the praises of using Wine in Linux, but that of course requires running Linux.
For 32-bit games using 16-bit installers, often you can get away with just replacing the setup.exe with its 32-bit equivalent. http://www.reactos.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=10988 has useful instructions.
Last edited by Jorpho; 02-11-2015 at 11:12 PM.
"There is much pleasure to be gained from useless knowledge." --Bertrand Russel (attributed)