Lazy Game Reviews lazily reviews a game for the first time in quite a while…
Saturday, June 20, 2015
Wednesday, June 10, 2015
Video: “Protect and Survive” on “Oddity Archive”
More nuclear war preparedness films on Oddity Archive: this time it’s the British Protect and Survive series from the mid-1970s.
Thursday, June 4, 2015
Video: AOL 4.0 on Modern Windows
Did you know that you can still run AOL 4.0 from 1998 somewhat on modern Windows PCs with Windows 8.1? This video, by Lazy Game Reviews, shows you how to do that and gives you a little tour. But if you want to try this yourself, you better hurry up! You only have until June 30th when AOL shuts down version 4.0!
I’ll be testing this on Windows XP SP3 and Windows 95 and will write up a post about my experience afterward, so stay tuned!
Wednesday, May 13, 2015
Video: “Duck and Cover” on “Oddity Archive”
Ben Minnotte from the Oddity Archive takes a look at the infamous 1951 civil defense film Duck and Cover.
Wednesday, April 29, 2015
Video: How to Cook a Hot Dog with Batteries
What happens if you connect a hot dog to an electrical source? Let's find out...
Video by Brandon Bishop ("BBISHOPPCM" on YouTube)
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
Video: How Tough are SNES and Genesis Games?
Here's the sequel to the video I shared last week. This time, Super Nintendo and Sega Genesis cartridges duke it out to see which ones hold up better.
Thursday, April 16, 2015
Video: How Tough are NES Games?
This year marks the 30th anniversary of the Nintendo Entertainment System's release in North America. How many of your NES cartridges still work? Have you ever wondered why so many still survive? How much abuse can they take? According to this video, quite a beating.
This is my first test of Windows Live Writer (the 2009 version), a blogging tool available as part of Windows Live Essentials (now just Windows Essentials). It works with most major blogging platforms, such as Blogger and Wordpress.
Monday, February 9, 2015
My Website Now Up!
There isn't much there at the moment, but I will be adding more in the coming months, so stay tuned!
This site was built using Microsoft Expression Web and is hosted on Byet Internet Services (if you receive a certificate or security error while trying to log in, continue anyway since it leads to the cPanel website control panel).
Monday, February 2, 2015
Useful Software for Running Windows 3.1x in Virtual PC
I won't be covering the installation of DOS or Windows here since that's already on numerous websites elsewhere. I can tell you that I do have the floppy disks to MS-DOS 6.22 and Windows 3.1. However, I couldn't boot from DOS disk 1 and I'm missing disk 6 (of 7) from the Windows set, so if you don't have the disks, just download the appropriate disk images off the Internet, which you can "insert" into your virtual machine.
I chose Virtual PC mainly because I had heard of it several years ago and finally chose to try it out now. Sure there's VMware and VirtualBox, but Virtual PC is a Microsoft product, so I thought it should run Windows best (I haven't tried the others out yet, so I'm not sure about that statement). One advantage of using Virtual PC is that it emulates real life hardware such as the video card, which is the S3 Trio 64 PCI, unlike VirtualBox's custom VESA system. However, Virtual PC also lacks some flexibility and features, such as USB redirection (into the virtual machine) and network cards; Virtual PC is limited to the DEC/Intel 21140 card, while VirtualBox allows the user to select from such cards as the popular AMD PCNet and Intel PRO series. Anyway, here are links to the drivers for the hardware that Virtual PC emulates:
- S3 Trio 64 PCI video card (also comes with Windows 95, NT 3.51, NT 4.0, and OS/2 driver) (The option of not using DriverGuide's installer is only available to members. Just uncheck and decline all the offers for additional software; all the installer does is dump the driver files in a ZIP file within the same folder the program was run from.)
- Sound Blaster 16 sound card (this can also be used in any other virtualization software, since the Sound Blaster was the PC standard for audio back in the day)
- DEC/Intel 21140 network card NDIS2 drivers (for Windows for Workgroups only; also includes drivers for Microsoft LAN Manager (DOS and OS/2), Windows 95, and NT 4.0)
- TCP/IP-32 v. 3.11b for Windows for Workgroups (to connect to Internet)
- DEC/Intel 21140 network card DOS packet driver, WINPKT (so the driver can be used in Windows), and Trumpet Winsock 3.0d (all to connect to Internet in Windows 3.1)
- Virtual PC also emulates the popular Intel 440BX chipset, but Windows 3.1x doesn't care about that.
Setting up the network in Windows 3.1 is harder. Luckily, Trumpet Winsock's help file provides the instructions you'll need. Keep in mind that the packet driver is named DC.COM. All you need to type for the packet driver is the path to DC.COM and vector 0x60, i.e.
c:\trumpet\dc21x4\dc.com 0x60
WINPKT 0x60
Also, Trumpet Winsock is shareware, so it'll taunt you with a nag screen and a software time bomb. You can defuse it by using any of a handful of registration keys that some kind folks have posted on the Internet.
You may run across some programs that require you to install an additional program called Win32s in order to run. This software package adds some 32-bit functionality to the 16-bit Windows 3.1x series. The latest version is 1.30c, which you can download for free from Microsoft's FTP site. However, version 1.30 doesn't behave with Windows for Workgroups, so for those versions, you'll have to use version 1.25 instead. This means that some later versions of programs will not be able to run.
Also, you may encounter some programs (such as Netscape) that will cause Windows to crash and burn when try to start them (in Windows for Workgroups, that may be a sign that Win32s version 1.30 is installed). This may be because they are trying to access floating point unit (FPU) functions. The WINFLOAT package provides a program called HIDE87 that solves that problem by hiding the presence of the FPU. To reverse it, you run its opposite, SHOW87. You can download WINFLOAT here.
One more useful bundle of software is the Windows 3.1 Resource Kit. It includes a System Resource Monitor so you can see how much RAM and system resources you have remaining, which is great if you run programs that consume a lot of those, resulting in frequent "Insufficient memory" errors. You also get a network utility and a virtual desktop manager called TopDesk, years before that feature became popular. The Resource Kit can be obtained from Microsoft's FTP site.
There are many sites out there that host Windows 3.1 software, so you can continue to experience what computing was like back in the early to mid-'90s.
Wednesday, January 21, 2015
The Internet Archive's New DOS Game Library
Thanks goes to Clint from Lazy Game Reviews for bringing this to my attention. Here's his take on this news: