• mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    I remember in 1994 a friend had purchased OS2 for his 386dx with 8 (!!!) mind blowing megabytes of extended memory. OS2 took nearly 18 minutes to get to an interface you could use - not to install, to boot. went back to DOS lol.

    • HakFoo@lemmy.sdf.org
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      9 months ago

      I used it in a necromanced college laptop… 486DX2 at 40MHz, no L2 cache, but admittedly 20Mb of RAM. It was slower to boot than DOS, but reasonably usable. By 3.0 they included half-decent pack-in software, while Windows still had just Write (not even Wordpad)

    • Willy@sh.itjust.works
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      9 months ago

      Are your talking about the ibm version? I liked it and it was great for work because it could really multitask. I had a pretty good system though so no really long boots. my issue was that it couldn’t handle any gaming, so back to dos for me as well. crazy that it’s been all these years with windows, some good some bad, and now windows is shooting itself in the foot just as Linux is becoming a system that can finally handle anything.

    • mindlight@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      If it was OS/2 from IBM it was true multitasking and the OS in full control of memory allocation, something Microsoft only were able to offer after creating a new operating system from scratch (Windows NT).

      If you thought OS/2 took forever to boot on a 386DX with only 8MB of ram, imagine how long it would take to boot Windows NT 3.5 on that same machine…

      • bus_factor@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Windows NT came out of the failed collaboration with IBM and was originally meant to be OS/2 3.0. MS switched the APIs from OS/2 compatible to Windows compatible after Windows 3.0 took off, and it caused the collaboration to fall apart.

      • krimson@feddit.nl
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        9 months ago

        My dad ran IBM OS/2 Warp for a while on our PC. Rock stable. Shame it never really took off.

        • mindlight@lemm.ee
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          9 months ago

          OS/2 3.0 “Warp” was a little too much ahead of its time and had the exact same problem that Windows Mobile had: no applications.

          IBM tried to solve that with Windows emulation but it was a headache from the start and often have a buggy experience.

          It didn’t help that the real world hardest requirements were off the charts as compared to Windows 95 (still 16-bit MS-Dos based and not even close to what OS/2 was).

          IBM duideverything right from an engineering perspective but failed miserably on what the market wanted.

          It never stood a chance. IBM had always been great at delivering solutions that was well engineered. What IBM has n-e-v-e-r been good at is marketing and understanding the volume market.