![]() In practice however, Virtual PC is much much worse at emulating DOS than DOSBox. ![]() If you're thinking about installing DOS in a Virtual PC VM it's a good idea in principle. This is why for DOS games I recommend DOSBox instead. This means that with the virtual machine we'll set up in this tutorial we should be able to run any Windows program made from the dawn of time (1985, Windows 1.0) to 2001 and beyond-and any one not covered will most likely run just fine in Windows 7, Vista or XP.Īlthough Windows 9x runs DOS programs natively, games specially can show a number of memory and compatibility problems-as anyone who used Windows 9x back in the day may know. These versions, unlike XP and later (and NT and 2000) can run 16-bit Windows (old Windows 3.x and earlier) and DOS programs natively and they don't have user accounts with restricted access which could cause problems with old programs. This tutorial recommends Windows 95, 98 or Me (called "Windows 9x"), and for a good reason. ![]() First of all there's the question of which operating system you want to emulate. This isn't so hard to accomplish, you don't need to be a computer wiz. And we can install any OS in that hardware, as if it were a physical machine. Programs installed inside the virtual machine will behave as if, and believe that, they're running in the hardware the virtual machine is emulating. The good news is that it's not necessary to have this hardware really: a virtual machine (VM) is a software program emulating a computer, running inside our real PC. The ultimate solution to a compatibility problem where a program won't run in a hardware environment or an operating system that aren't the ones it was designed for, is of course to have that old hardware and OS handy, and install the program in them.
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