Recently we moved and I found an un-opened box of MS-DOS 5.0 upgrade. I don't even recall buying this, but it must have been just before the time Windows was released. Started me thinking.... Should I load this on an old 386?
Dale
Recently we moved and I found an un-opened box of MS-DOS 5.0 upgrade. I don't even recall buying this, but it must have been just before the time Windows was released. Started me thinking.... Should I load this on an old 386?
Dale
Many cases for the new PCs and laptops is, you need to get an "outboard" 3 1/2" floppy drive to load the OS. Most of the releases for DOS were not on CD, and most of the new systems don't come with floppy drives. In fact, many of the newer devices are network based, and don't come with CDs either.
Many cases for the new PCs and laptops is, you need to get an "outboard" 3 1/2" floppy drive to load the OS. Most of the releases for DOS were not on CD, and most of the new systems don't come with floppy drives. In fact, many of the newer devices are network based, and don't come with CDs either.
The boxed DOS I have is on 5 1/4" floppy, luckily my 386 has a 5 1/4" drive.
Oh, I almost forgot the dual format 1.2M 5 1/4 drives. If I recall, they didn't have trouble with reading, only with a write/read cycle. The reason was the voltage level for the head was decreased so the "spot" of data would be smaller.
Goes to another potential issue, which might just be urban legend. Data degradation on old magnetic media. Not sure the data image has held up over the decades since DOS 3.1.
Interesting idea.
I may have to fire up one of my legacy systems to see how well the floppys work.
DAB
Hi DAB!
I used to design floppy drive systems and my mentor used to service and align them properly.
It's amazing how many floppy disk drives weren't optimally aligned! (Hence the woes of unnecessary read errors).
Would anyone be interested is a series of fun articles about them?
It might come out in dribs and drabs due to my illness.
Compact
14.4kbps was an amazing feat especially over a phone line is was limited to a 3kHz bandwidth.
It was a great use of DSPs (Digital Signal Processors).
I used to worked for several modem manufacturers during my career.
300 baud just used FSK (Frequency Shift Keying), faster speeds used more elaborate schemes.