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  • glhaynes 690 days ago | parent | on: Atari Lynx: Caught in the crossfire of 90s magazin...
    Every few months I go down a rabbit hole and lose a whole evening to The Cutting Room Floor: https://tcrf.net/The_Cutting_Room_Floor
    • qingcharles 690 days ago
      That's a great site, thank you!

      Sometimes the features aren't locked-out, it's just that no-one ever figured out how to access them. I think it was an NBA or NFL game a few days ago that someone found two new characters that were playable the whole time?

  • glhaynes 697 days ago | parent | on: CP/M for the 6502
    I believe it's higher level. Note that there's precedent: CP/M-86, a port to the Intel 8086, existed. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CP/M-86
    • dfarquhar 696 days ago
      Also there was a port to the Motorola 68000, CP/M-68K.
  • glhaynes 699 days ago | parent | on: The History of OS/2
    >There is a difference between the Microsoft and IBM versions of OS/2 that clearly stems from Bill Gates’ feelings about the 286. In the Microsoft release should the kernel detect an Intel 80386, MS-DOS real mode applications would run via instructions to switch modes between real and protected. In the IBM version this didn’t happen. IBM only implemented the method employed for the 80286 which was to triple fault the CPU, trigger a shutdown cycle, have the motherboard reset the CPU, and have BIOS skip post and jump to a specified memory address immediately following the return of CPU execution. For retro enthusiasts, try to find Microsoft’s OS/2 for your 386.

    I was an OS/2 user back in the day and have never heard about this difference! I was under the impression that IBM OS/2 and MS OS/2 were functionally identical. I wonder what difference this made for users.

    • CWuestefeld 699 days ago
      That is interesting. Although I only ever used the MS version on 286. This was the very first version of OS/2, the "text mode only" version mentioned in the article, when Presentation Manager (the windowing GUI) was a separate program.

      At the time, I worked on an office suite called Enable, which featured strong spreadsheet, word processing, and dbase-like database applications. Windows existed, but wasn't successful yet, and for some time we were explicitly testing for compatibility with OS/2.

      Later on, at the time OS/2 2 and Warp came out, I was working at IBM. The frustration there, among the people who cared at all, was palpable. They really believed they had a superior product, and largely blamed IBM management and marketing organizations for its failure.

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