Research Stream: OS/2 1.0 Explorations: Difference between revisions
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NCommander (talk | contribs) Created page with "This is an upcoming set of streams to document the early versions of OS/2 including the IBM, Microsoft, and Extended Edition. The goal is to create a baseline summary of everything OS/2 is and was intended to be. Unfortunately, there's relatively little surviving from the OS/2 1.x era, and even less of the 16-bit console era. As Microsoft (and likely IBM) strongly believed in dogfooding, the goal is to create example environments representing what is known about how the..." |
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This is an upcoming set of streams to document the early versions of OS/2 including the IBM, Microsoft, and Extended Edition. The goal is to create a baseline summary of everything OS/2 is and was intended to be. Unfortunately, there's relatively little surviving from the OS/2 1.x era, and even less of the 16-bit console era. | This is an upcoming set of streams to document the early versions of OS/2 including the IBM, Microsoft, and Extended Edition. The goal is to create a baseline summary of everything OS/2 is and was intended to be. Unfortunately, there's relatively little surviving from the OS/2 1.x era, and even less of the 16-bit console era. | ||
== Creating Example Environments == | |||
As Microsoft (and likely IBM) strongly believed in dogfooding, the goal is to create example environments representing what is known about how they used. Microsoft originally made OS/2's software development kit available to | As Microsoft (and likely IBM) strongly believed in dogfooding, the goal is to create example environments representing what is known about how they used. Microsoft originally made OS/2's software development kit available to | ||
Revision as of 14:16, 7 January 2023
This is an upcoming set of streams to document the early versions of OS/2 including the IBM, Microsoft, and Extended Edition. The goal is to create a baseline summary of everything OS/2 is and was intended to be. Unfortunately, there's relatively little surviving from the OS/2 1.x era, and even less of the 16-bit console era.
Creating Example Environments
As Microsoft (and likely IBM) strongly believed in dogfooding, the goal is to create example environments representing what is known about how they used. Microsoft originally made OS/2's software development kit available to