Install Windows 95 Using Dosbox

  понедельник 14 января
      61

Jan 18, 2018 - Windows 9x is NOT officially supported under DOSBox. *STABILITY OF WINDOWS 9x GUEST IN DOSBOX IS HIGHLY DEPENDENT ON.

Thanks for any help. I had that game called 'Fallout'. An awesome game from 1997.

It also had a patch 1.1 and a dos version. I could play the game on my computer after working with the config and stuff.

But I wanted to show how cool this game actually is to my 'non geek' friends. I thought about using iDos application (which uses DosBox) to run the dos version of the game. The problem I got was the game freezing a lot, the app crashing. Not loading at all. I got the game to work after 2 days of research. But the graphics were really glitchy and the sound was gone.

(And sound = atmosphere of the game, the experience) I couldn't enjoy the game without sound. So i thought about installing windows through iDos. I googled and found out that i can install windows 3, windows 95, windows 98 or windows me. I don't know why, but i downloaded an.img file of windows 98. It took me a good 5 hours to get it to work.

After doing that i tried to connect a 'fake disk' to windows 98. But I failed. So i used an app called WinImage to open up the files in.img file. Then i added the fallout setup files.

After that I used iDos to boot windows. Installed fallout on the img using iDos. Then when i tried booting the game i got a message that the game can only run in windows 95. I downloaded windows 95 and deleted 98.

I was faster this time, got it to work in under 10 minutes! Nice, isn't it? I installed fallout again.

It told me to download directx 3.0 or higher. So i downloaded directx 6.1 and installed. The install also asked me if i wanted to install a driver.

I said 'yes'. But then the whole windows crashed.

I reinstalled everything and said 'no' this time. Everything is going well. I tried to boot the game now. It came up with a warning: This app needs to be run with 256 color or higher. Or something like that.

Anyway i then looked up at the control panel, to display. I only had 16 color or monochrome.

And the display was only 640x480. I googled a lot to find a working win95a graphic driver. I installed it. It got installed well. Then i chose new graphics card adaptor. The new driver of course! (Still going well) Checked the control panel, display.

The 256 color, truecolor(32) and 16 bit color options were unlocked. I chose 256 of course.

After chosing 256 color the display option popped. Now I could slide from 480 to 1024. Great, right? Though I kept it at 480 and just chose 256 color. I clicked apply.

But windows warned me that i need to restart in order to apply changes. Which closes the iDos application. I reopened the iDos and booted windows 95 again. I didn't notice anything different. I checked display settings again. And it was still 16 color with 256 color and such unlucked.

But whenever I choose them it tells me to restart and closes the app. I googled more and found that dosbox doesn't support 256 color.

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But I also found that some people got it to work. Just the files were old and deleted. So I couldn't download. But I am so close. I can't stop yet.

If anyone can help me get past this problem, thanks. Problem: Can't set 256 color without restarting. And when i restart it is back to 16 color. Is there a way to boot it always 256 color maybe?

As the Windows 95 project started to come together, I was approached to undertake a special project: Run Windows 3.1 in an MS-DOS virtual machine inside Windows 95. This was the ultimate in backward compatibility, along multiple axes. First of all, it was a demonstration of Windows 95's backward compatibility by showing that it could even use an emulated MS-DOS virtual machine to run the operating system it was designed to replace. Second, it was the ultimate backward compatibility. If you had a program that simply wouldn't work with Windows 95 for whatever reason, you could fire up a copy of Windows 3.1 in a virtual machine and run the program there.

To use it, you installed Windows 3.1 and Windows 95 into separate directories, and then made a few edits to the Windows 3.1 SYSTEM.INI file to replace the mouse and serial drivers with special versions. There were some other preparatory steps that had to be done, but eventually you got to the point where you could double-click the Windows 3.1 icon, and up came Windows 3.1 in an MS-DOS virtual machine. Although you could in theory run Windows 3.1 in a window, the experience was pretty bad in practice for a variety of reasons.

Computer systems of that era simply didn't have the computing horsepower to render the video fast enough. And you wanted keyboard hotkeys like Alt+ Tab to switch among your Windows 3.1 windows, rather than treating Windows 3.1 as one giant program to be switched into or out of. Running Windows 3.1 as a program inside Windows 95 served as a convincing technology demonstration, but the feature was cut shortly after it came together. One reason is that.