I've managed to install and run Windows 3.1, 95 and 98 on Android via the BOCHS emulator. I believe QEMU would work as well. I've never managed to get the network connection to work. But I can swap data from my Android partitions to Windows partitions and run the EXE files.
So in practice, I have to download everything on native Android and then copy it across. By the way, it is really slow. It took me about a day to install Windows, and then to actually boot Windows it generally takes about 10-20 minutes. I'm really interested to know how far people have got with this - whether anyone ever managed to install Windows 2000, XP, Vista, 7, 8, 8.1?
I figured this might deserve its own thread since I've been asked / heard this question a number of times. This post has been created in response to this thread:.WARNING: The following instructions delete all data on the hard drive. They may be modified to retain data, but I take no responsibility for data loss.KNOWN LIMITATIONS:. Using DOS requires that the drive be formatted in FAT32. It is possible to convert to NTFS later on, but I'll leave that decision up to you. Your system must bet set to boot from the floppy drive. A QUICK NOTE: Many users can avoid installation from DOS by using the bootable floppy diskettes provided by Microsoft.
You can find them here: The information given will allow the following to happen: 1.) Install Windows 2000 (XP?) if you do not have a bootable CD-ROM. Doesn't W2k/XP setup need files from the subfolders in i386? 'copy.' does not take subdirs with it. There is also no need to make the HD bootable or to install the CDROM drivers manually. Download custom Windows 98SE bootdisk from 2. Make the floppy 3.
Boot from the floppy. Adam schlesinger. Create and format a partition for w2k setup. It should be 600MB+ is you skip point 7, 1.2GB+ if not. All the tools you need are on the floppy. Reboot from the floppy 6. Run smartdrv from the floppy to make things go faster 7. (Optional) use the xcopy command to transfer the i386 folder to the HD.
/E switch is for transferring subdirectories. Run winnt.exe from the CD (or HD if you did the copy thing). My W2K Pro CD has a directory containing the programs and files required to extract to floppy and create the “boot disks” all 4 of them. With instructions. (like NT used) The Directory is called “MAKEBOOT” And the program called “makeboot.exe” run it and Follow the instructions. It will create the 4 boot disk set. To install the OS just Put disk 1 into the floppy drive set your PC to boot from Floppy and reboot then follow the instructions.
It'll take you through the install but copy the initial driver pool from the floppies then load the CD after it is done with them. Boot your computer using a Window 98 boot disk. You may need to add Smartdrv.sys to the floppy, to use on older systems.
You can find Smartdrv.sys in the TOOLS, OLDDOS directory of a Windows 98 install disk At the A prompt type FDISK, follow instructions to delete an existing partition, or create a partition. At the A prompt type FORMAT C, follow instructions At the A prompt type Smartdrv, press enter At the A prompt type CD E: where E: is the CD ROM Place the OS install CD in the CD Drive At the A prompt type CD i386, press enter At the A prompt type winnt, press enter, follow on screen instructions That's it! Heaven forbid if you have to install any Microsoft OS using floppy disks. I remember installing Windows 95 from floppies.Enter the command edit C: config.sys.Type the following: DEVICE=C: OAKCDROM.SYS /D:MSCD001.Save and exit as you did before.Remove your floppy disk, insert the Windows CD and restart the computer. If you have a swappable floppy/CD-ROM, exchange the floppy for the CD drive and insert the Windows 2000 or XP CD.
In order for DOS to detect the CD-ROM, it is very important that you have the CD in before your computer boots next time.Your hard drive is now bootable and will now have CD-ROM support/list 3.) Getting the Windows 2000 / XP setup started. The Windows 98 logo will appear. Your computer should now boot into DOS at command prompt again. (C. You will now have CD-ROM access (D. Enter the command D: i386 winnt.exe.Instructions edited to exclude CD copy, although you may if you wish Now Windows 2000 setup will begin.
It will also perhaps nag you about smartdrive not being installed. Just ignore it and continue setup anyway.
I'd tell you how, but it would make this thing even more complicated. It may also ask you about the location of the setup files. The default path is D:, which should be correct. Simply press ENTER if it asks.
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Click to expand.Hunny I did that. Do you think i like switching back one huge PC back and forth. I wrote down your instructions the problem is it's not detecting the 'E' drive. It's not recognizing that i have a cdrom at all. I've tried yours, as well as everyones on this site. I think it has to do with the driver.
It's weird though because when my mom gave me this comp the cd rom she had in it didn't work either. So i put the one i knew worked in it and now the same thing. Is it possible that the cables connecting it are bad?
I didn't ignore you.
Windows 3.1 - Microsoft (1992) Tested By: iamthejake2000 runnable - playable - supported DOSBox version: 0.65 ( supported) This Battle Station is Fully Operational (2011-05-14 18:12) Floppy6 Managed to get install of 3.1 running flawlessly. No crashing after using DOS programs and no hangs. In your config, set up with svgas3 and sb16 audio. I installed the vga drivers for the S3 Trio 64V, which allows 64,000 color (high color) at 1024x768 resolution.
For the audio, make sure to use the win3.1 installer for sound blaster 16 -the DOS installer messes up, so you must use the installer made for 3.1. If you find the legit installer, the file name on the actual install folder should read 'sb16w31'. Unfortunately, I don't know exactly where to scoop these drivers from on the internet.
I own a legitimate copy of win 3.1 on floppies, and the drivers I have are literally from my old PC that I used to run back in 1998. Darkromis (2008-07-17 00:05) darkromis i had the same problem as bob bobato, but i found a webpage explaining about windows 3.1 with dosbox and besides explaining you all the installation proccess, that pages got links to drivers and using s3 driver resolve the problem of crashing after using a dos program and also it gives you the chance of changing your resolution and also you can use 256 colors. By the way the webpage is Works well enough (2008-04-25 00:02) bob bobato Works well enough, but if you try to use a DOS program through windows 3.1, it will work, but DOSbox will crash when you exit the program. Note: (2006-06-02 12:39) iamthejake2000 Works fine in VGA 640x480 16 color mode, can get SB16 drivers installed and working.
My family’s first computer was an desktop with an 25Mhz processor and 4MB of RAM that my parents purchased when I was in grade school. It had and on its 160MB HDD.
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I can remember creating graphics in, playing and, listening to audio CDs using the CD-ROM (we didn’t have a CD player back then), and of course playing Windows games (my favorite was ). DOSBox does not emulate Windows 3.1 by itself, but Windows 3.1x can be installed in DOSBox. Fortunately I still had a copy of my parents’ Windows 3.1 floppy disks that I was able to transfer to a CD-R for easier access on my PC (I don’t even have a floppy drive in my desktop PC anymore). You could also put the Windows files into a folder such as C: DOSBox WinInstall instead of using a CD-R (you’ll have to adapt the instructions below if you do). If you don’t have a copy of Windows 3.1, you’ll need to. Installing Windows Assuming you have already, start it up, put the Windows 3.1 CD into your optical drive, and switch to the D: drive in DOSBox to run setup.exe. Run the Windows setup in DOSBox Run the Express setup. Once Windows starts you’ll need to enter a user name.
When prompted to install a printer, select the generic/text printer. If you still have DOOM installed from the first post in this series, you may be promted to select the application name for C: DOOM DM.EXE. Just choose “None of the above” and continue with the installation. Once it’s complete, select Reboot. DOSBox will quit, so you’ll have to start it back up.
Once the Windows 3.1 setup is complete, select Reboot, then start DOSBox again. To launch Windows, type cd windows to change to the Windows directory, then type win to start Windows. At this point Windows should load successfully, but without sound.
We need to install sound and video drivers to get the most out of the Windows 3.1 experience. Installing Sound Drivers DOSBox can emulate several sound devices, including the widely-compatible Sound Blaster 16. In order to use this device, we’ll need to install a Sound Blaster driver in Windows 3.1.
I found for the installation process, but in case that link goes down I’m including instructions here. First, and unzip them into C: DOSBox Drivers SB. This will make them available in DOSBox at C: Drivers SB. Unzip the Sound Blaster drivers to C: DOSBox Drivers SB. Start up DOSBox, switch to the SB directory and run install.exe. Run the Sound Blaster installation.
Choose the full installation. At the next screen, be sure to set the Microsoft Windows 3.1 path to “C: WINDOWS” before proceeding.
Be sure to set the Windows 3.1 path to C: WINDOWS On the next screen, you must change the Interrupt setting (IRQ) to match DOSBox’s configuration. By default DOSBox uses 7 (it would only be different if you changed it in the dosbox.conf file), so you’ll need to change it from “5” to “7.” Make sure the Interrupt setting matches how DOSBox is configured. Continue with the rest of the installation. It may take a few minutes to complete. If you are prompted to replace the MIDIMAP.CFG file, select either “Backup” or “Proceed” and continue the installation. Once it is finished, exit DOSBox, then restart it and launch Windows. You should hear the ta-da or chime sound when Windows starts and see a new Audio Software group.
At this point, just for fun, I like to open Accessories Media Player and open canyon.mid. This is a MIDI track that came with Windows 3.1. It should start playing if everything is setup correctly. You can listen to canyon.mid in the Media Player to test MIDI playback. Installing Video Drivers By default DOSBox emulates an S3 graphics card, and by installing an S3 graphics driver we can run Windows 3.1 in 1024×768 with 64K color. You can grab the driver and read instructions (and some good troubleshooting steps) on the same page used for the Sound Blaster , but again I’ve included instructions here in case that link goes down.
Download the and unzip them to C: DOSBox Drivers S3 so they are available in DOSBox at C: Drivers S3. Unzip the S3 drivers into C: DOSBox Drivers S3. Start up DOSBox, switch to the Windows directory, and run setup. Run Windows setup to configure the S3 graphics driver. The Windows setup will allow installation of the S3 graphics driver. Select the Display setting and press Enter to change it from “VGA.” Select the Display setting to change it from “VGA.” On the next screen, arrow down and select “Other (Requires disk provided by hardware manufacturer),” then enter “C: Drivers S3” as the path where the files can be found.
Select “Other” as the Display type. Enter “C: Drivers S3” as the path where the S3 driver files are located. On the next screen you can choose which driver to install up to 1024×768 64K (anything higher probably won’t work). Because I intend to use Windows 3.1 mostly for gaming, I’m going to stick with 800×600 at 256 colors (which is the highest resolution/color that many games will support).
Select a driver to use up to 1024×768 64K. For gaming, 800×600 256 colors is probably best. Continue with the installation. If you are prompted to enter the path to the driver files again, enter “C: Drivers S3.” Once the installation is complete, enter win at the DOSBox prompt to launch Windows. You should now see an 800×600 screen and be able to set the wallpaper to the included 256 color pattern to verify your graphics driver is working. Now you can decorate Windows 3.1 with exciting 256 color wallpaper!
This is all you need to run many games (like the aforementioned King’s Quest VI Enhanced), but in a future post I may cover some additional settings and drivers for improving the gaming experience further. Posted in Tagged, Post navigation.
Greetings all! As of right now I have a tricked out non-stock Windows 98SE install, however games such as GTA3 require at least Windows 2000 to install, and I don't think KernelEX can 'trick' it into installing.
My 'Classic Gaming Rig' specs meet the recommended requirements for the game, however im not just a Windows gamer im also a DOS gamer so I do have some concerns if I decide to use Windows 2000 it's what I used to use 'back in the day' but it's been forever ago so I don't remember if what im about to ask worked or not. My question is this, if I installed DOS games and DOS drivers SB16 stuff on the same Windows 2000 HDD, and booted into DOS with a DOS boot floppy disk created with either Win98SE or Windows 2000 will those games run properly complete with sound, etc? Thanks in advance. If the disk is formatted as NTFS, the answer is no. MS-DOS won't work with NTFS. If you installed Windows 2000 in a FAT partition, maybe.
Install Dosbox Windows 10![]()
Only FreeDOS and the newer MS-DOS included with Windows 98 will work with FAT32 partitions, but almost every modern DOS (where modern = 3.31) will work with FAT16 partitions. I would try to make a DOS - Windows 2000 dual boot. The trick is to install MS-DOS, and hide it so Windows 2000 can't find the previous operating system. Once Windows is installed, you can 'unhide' the partition so Windows 2000 can use it, and install a boot manager so you can choose which operating system will you boot. I used that procedure to get a triple boot (DOS - Linux - Windows XP). Gerwin wrote:I have a system with both DOS 7.1 and Windows 2000 in the same primary FAT32 partition.
At boot I can select which one to load. With XP it is easy: when you install dos 7.1 first, then afterwards the XP installation will make it a multiboot automatically.
Don't remember if 2k does this too. 2K certainly does it, heck, NT3.51 and 4 do it too! When you're installing NT/2K/XP, and it detects an MS-DOS (or Win9x) installation, and you choose not to upgrade it, the installer takes a snapshot of the boot sector (the first 512 bytes) and writes it to BOOTSECT.DOS. Then it puts a line in boot.ini like: C: =MS-DOS or C: =Previous Windows version When you select that option on the boot menu, ntldr starts executing the contents of bootsect.dos, and boots DOS from the partition marked active.
Install Windows 2000 In Virtualbox (key + Iso)
I went ahead and installed Windows 2000 Professional SP4 + Post-SP4 Hotfixes + OnePiece Windows 2000 Post SP4 Update Pack v5.0.2 Final. Sweet retro gods, this Pentium III system runs Doom 3! Low settings + 1024x768 = 'playable' roughly 20fps or so in gameplay, cut scenes are between 20 - 60fps. Ironically the lower the resolution the slower, because it's utilizing the CPU more, higher the res the faster because it's utilizing more GPU. All I can say is.
Dosbox Emulator Online
O.o - I wish it was an 'smooth running' as the original Xbox version, but alas can't have it all. Then again the original Xbox version was customized for that hardware. The box says it requires a Pentium 4 1.5Ghz and here that lowly ole Pentium III 700Mhz is, able to play Doom 3. Pentium III the little CPU that could. Update: I temporarily overclocked the CPU from 100Mhz FSB to 120Mhz FSB effectively making the CPU 842Mhz my RAM won't go past 120Mhz even if I set the CAS higher and gameplay is around 30fps now.
Hmm, seems like i'll be wanting one of those 1.4Ghz Tualatin Pentium III's soon, or maybe i'd settle for a 1Ghz Slot-1 Coppermine Pentium III, but yeah a 1.4Ghz Tualatin sure would be rockin'! Gerwin wrote:I have a system with both DOS 7.1 and Windows 2000 in the same primary FAT32 partition. At boot I can select which one to load. With XP it is easy: when you install dos 7.1 first, then afterwards the XP installation will make it a multiboot automatically. Don't remember if 2k does this too. 2K certainly does it, heck, NT3.51 and 4 do it too! When you're installing NT/2K/XP, and it detects an MS-DOS (or Win9x) installation, and you choose not to upgrade it, the installer takes a snapshot of the boot sector (the first 512 bytes) and writes it to BOOTSECT.DOS.
Then it puts a line in boot.ini like: C: =MS-DOS or C: =Previous Windows version When you select that option on the boot menu, ntldr starts executing the contents of bootsect.dos, and boots DOS from the partition marked active. Thanks Squall! That method worked perfectly! Seeing that boot choice screen brings back memories now that I have seen it again. I guess I did indeed dual-boot DOS and Windows 2000 Pro back in the day.
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