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Mine too, and the colours are quite messed up: a workaround is setting the color depth to 256 colours, instead of 16 bit. Anyway, no, DOSBox can emulate DOS-based systems only: the latest DOS version is Windows ME (although DOS is somewhat concealed); from Windows 2000 onwards, DOS functions are just emulated. If you want to emulate 2000, XP or whatever NT version, you need VirtualBox or VMware.
The worst bug I found is the impossibility of accessing the drive C: from WinME through Computer.
- Install Windows 2000 Operating System
- Install Windows 2000
- Dosbox Download
- Install Windows 2000 Over Xp
- Install Windows 2000 Dosbox Windows 10
Installing Windows 95 in DOSBox, tips to achieve a successful install and how to navigate any problems that can come up. Running Windows 95 in DOSBox. A comprehensive how to guide. Installation Video. We will only be booting into Windows using the the official release 0.74 twice.
How to install Windows 9. Step 1 - When do you need Windows 9. Install Windows 2000 In Dosbox Games Free. Download DOSBox for free. An Open Source DOS emulator to run old DOS games. DOSBox emulates a full x86 pc with sound and DOS. Its main use is to run old DOS games on. 3.) Install Windows 2000 (XP?) if you have a swappable floppy / CD-ROM laptop, but cannot boot from a CD How to install Windows 2000 from DOS without a bootable CDROM 1.) Obtain a Windows 98SE. Our goal is to eventually make DOSBox-X a complete emulation package that covers all pre-2000 DOS and Windows 9x based hardware scenarios, including peripherals, motherboards, CPUs, and all manner of hardware that was made for PC hardware of that time.
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Porter
Port Information
- Submitted: Feb 09 2015 10:44 PM
- Last Updated: Jan 27 2019 09:26 PM
- Views: 8816
- Downloads: 500
Wrapper Type & Video Card Compatibility
- Wrapper Type: DOSBox
Wrapper Type Info
Note:
Wrappers have different Mac OS X compatibility!
Wineskin:10.610.710.810.9
Cider:10.610.710.810.9
CXZ/CXEx:10.610.710.810.9
What is WINE & what is a Wrapper?
Wrappers have different Mac OS X compatibility!
Wineskin:10.610.710.810.9
Cider:10.610.710.810.9
CXZ/CXEx:10.610.710.810.9
Video Card Info
GREY = not tested
GREEN = fully playable
YELLOW = playable with minor glitches
ORANGE = playable with some effort
RED = severe glitches / unplayable
GREEN = fully playable
YELLOW = playable with minor glitches
ORANGE = playable with some effort
RED = severe glitches / unplayable
Windows Millennium Edition, or Windows ME (marketed as being pronounced as the pronoun 'Me', is a graphical operating system from Microsoft launched on September 14, 2000. It was the last operating system released in the Windows 9x series.
Windows ME was the successor to Windows 98 SE and was targeted specifically at home PC users. It included Internet Explorer 5.5, Windows Media Player 7, and the new Windows Movie Maker software, which provided basic video editing and was designed to be easy to use for home users. Microsoft also updated the graphical user interface, shell features, and Windows Explorer in Windows ME with some of those first introduced in Windows 2000, which had been released as a business-oriented operating system seven months earlier. Windows ME could be upgraded to Internet Explorer 6 SP1 (but not to SP2 (SV1) or Internet Explorer 7), Outlook Express 6 SP1 and Windows Media Player 9 Series. Microsoft .NET Framework up to and including version 2.0 is supported; however, versions 2.0 SP1, 3.x, and greater are not. Office XP was the last version of Microsoft Office to be compatible with Windows ME.
Windows ME is a continuation of the Windows 9x model, but with restricted access to real mode MS-DOS in order to decrease system boot time. This was one of the most unpopular changes in Windows ME, because applications that needed real mode DOS to run, such as older disk utilities, did not run under Windows ME (although the system could either be booted into real mode DOS using a bootable Windows ME floppy disk or the configuration could be tweaked manually to reenable access to the underlying MS-DOS).
Personal Notes:
This is a DOSBox Port of Windows ME that includes a full install of Microsoft Office 2000 as well as Half-Life and a few other apps. This port utilizes a custom build of DOSBox Megabuild 6 + Glide patch from gulikoza, therefore hardware acceleration does work for some 3Dfx Glide enabled games. Boot time is very fast (around 6 seconds at max) - GUI rendering is a bit slow at times but acceptable.
My System Specs:
- OS: OS X 10.5.8 Leopard
- CPU: Intel Core2Duo 2.9 Ghz
- RAM: 8 GB
- Video: nVidia GeForce 9600M GT
- Disk Space: 2 GB
Known Issues & Install Notes:
Leave the Win ME.app inside the WinDOS folder and place both into your main Applications directory for best results - it gets unstable if you place it on external media or in a very complex directory structure. Also note that some Windows apps can still be unstable at times and acceptable performace of the Win9X environment requires a fast Dual core Intel Mac.
I hope you enjoy this port nonetheless.
-doc
Windows ME was the successor to Windows 98 SE and was targeted specifically at home PC users. It included Internet Explorer 5.5, Windows Media Player 7, and the new Windows Movie Maker software, which provided basic video editing and was designed to be easy to use for home users. Microsoft also updated the graphical user interface, shell features, and Windows Explorer in Windows ME with some of those first introduced in Windows 2000, which had been released as a business-oriented operating system seven months earlier. Windows ME could be upgraded to Internet Explorer 6 SP1 (but not to SP2 (SV1) or Internet Explorer 7), Outlook Express 6 SP1 and Windows Media Player 9 Series. Microsoft .NET Framework up to and including version 2.0 is supported; however, versions 2.0 SP1, 3.x, and greater are not. Office XP was the last version of Microsoft Office to be compatible with Windows ME.
Windows ME is a continuation of the Windows 9x model, but with restricted access to real mode MS-DOS in order to decrease system boot time. This was one of the most unpopular changes in Windows ME, because applications that needed real mode DOS to run, such as older disk utilities, did not run under Windows ME (although the system could either be booted into real mode DOS using a bootable Windows ME floppy disk or the configuration could be tweaked manually to reenable access to the underlying MS-DOS).
Personal Notes:
This is a DOSBox Port of Windows ME that includes a full install of Microsoft Office 2000 as well as Half-Life and a few other apps. This port utilizes a custom build of DOSBox Megabuild 6 + Glide patch from gulikoza, therefore hardware acceleration does work for some 3Dfx Glide enabled games. Boot time is very fast (around 6 seconds at max) - GUI rendering is a bit slow at times but acceptable.
My System Specs:
- OS: OS X 10.5.8 Leopard
- CPU: Intel Core2Duo 2.9 Ghz
- RAM: 8 GB
- Video: nVidia GeForce 9600M GT
- Disk Space: 2 GB
Known Issues & Install Notes:
Leave the Win ME.app inside the WinDOS folder and place both into your main Applications directory for best results - it gets unstable if you place it on external media or in a very complex directory structure. Also note that some Windows apps can still be unstable at times and acceptable performace of the Win9X environment requires a fast Dual core Intel Mac.
I hope you enjoy this port nonetheless.
-doc
Can someone here please test this properly on OSX 10.7+ - I've been too lazy to do it myself
Hi doc,
First time using dosbox. Just wanted to try this out, so I may not be the person who can test this properly. Downloaded it, and so far it only runs in windowed safe mode. The mouse.vxd driver somehow crashes it otherwise. Safe mode works without any problems, of course without the ability to launch games (Vgui.dll error) and certain system software.
Trying this on Mavericks 10.9.4. Copied the WinDOS folder inside Applications.
First time using dosbox. Just wanted to try this out, so I may not be the person who can test this properly. Downloaded it, and so far it only runs in windowed safe mode. The mouse.vxd driver somehow crashes it otherwise. Safe mode works without any problems, of course without the ability to launch games (Vgui.dll error) and certain system software.
Trying this on Mavericks 10.9.4. Copied the WinDOS folder inside Applications.
Install Windows 2000 Operating System
what happens in Fullscreen mode? Does it show a messed up color palette? Have you tried uninstalling certain devices from the Device Manager and reboot into normal mode?
Also try moving the Win ME.app to your Systems root directory and see if the VGUI.dll error still appears.
It's really weird but functionality of certain Windows programs seems to depend on which directory of the hosts system the DOSBox Wrapper resides...
Also try moving the Win ME.app to your Systems root directory and see if the VGUI.dll error still appears.
It's really weird but functionality of certain Windows programs seems to depend on which directory of the hosts system the DOSBox Wrapper resides...
No, nothing. It just crashes right back to the desktop. Colors are working. Tried uninstalling some devices. Some devices weren't found, like the mouse.vxd driver (haven't tried all of them yet).
Also tried reinstalling/updating them but restarting after that doesn't seem to work (A 'couldn't reboot' bluescreen error). Moved the folder to my Systems root and the vgui.dll error vanished. Starting Half-Life, it now displays another error: 'Your graphics card does not support the necessary raster operation'. After that it prompts me to install DirectX6 and restart Half-Life. This is still in windowed safe mode.
Tried different configurations with the configuration file inside the DosBox wrapper (changing renderer, fullscreen, windowed, mouse capturing etc.) but that didn't help as well.
Edit: Mixed up the error messages. Here are some screenshots:
http://cl.ly/image/3...9777.1385417505
http://cl.ly/image/2...9777.1385417505
http://cl.ly/image/3...9777.1385417505
Also tried reinstalling/updating them but restarting after that doesn't seem to work (A 'couldn't reboot' bluescreen error). Moved the folder to my Systems root and the vgui.dll error vanished. Starting Half-Life, it now displays another error: 'Your graphics card does not support the necessary raster operation'. After that it prompts me to install DirectX6 and restart Half-Life. This is still in windowed safe mode.
Tried different configurations with the configuration file inside the DosBox wrapper (changing renderer, fullscreen, windowed, mouse capturing etc.) but that didn't help as well.
Edit: Mixed up the error messages. Here are some screenshots:
http://cl.ly/image/3...9777.1385417505
http://cl.ly/image/2...9777.1385417505
http://cl.ly/image/3...9777.1385417505
The DirectX error is most likely the result of Windows being booted in Safe Mode. I tried the port on a freshly installed Mavericks setup yesterday and can confirm your bug report. I tried removing certain drivers from the Windows system folder (like msmouse.vxd / mouse.drv etc..) and I tried a selective startup but it always crashes right after the mouse driver is supposed to load, whether the driver is actually installed or not - I'm pretty much stuck on this end - no idea why it works on pre 10.7 setups but not on later OSX builds.... I might have to recompile this version of DOSBox for OSX Mavericks - there's also a DOSBox Daum Build with the neccessary patches for Win9x to work that was built by someone else and is 10.8+ compatible - I'll try fiddling with that in a minute...
Hi doc.
I confirm dll errors or Snow Leo as well.
I will fiddle with it more later and update you.
I confirm dll errors or Snow Leo as well.
I will fiddle with it more later and update you.
OK progress at last! I've been able to make this thing run on OSX 10.7+ with this custom built wrapper: http://cl.ly/1X162I1F2s0o
Extract it and place the winME.img file from the old wrapper into the WinME.app/Contents/ folder of this one and you should be good to go.
If fullsceen mode still refuses to work try installing the latest X11 lib from http://xquartz.macosforge.org/
I've successfully tested this with OSX 10.9.2 Mavericks and fullscreen mode works for me.
Feedback is appreciated.
Extract it and place the winME.img file from the old wrapper into the WinME.app/Contents/ folder of this one and you should be good to go.
If fullsceen mode still refuses to work try installing the latest X11 lib from http://xquartz.macosforge.org/
I've successfully tested this with OSX 10.9.2 Mavericks and fullscreen mode works for me.
Feedback is appreciated.
Thanks! It works now, fullscreen and without safe mode. Programs work as well. Have to test more of course. But still no luck with the games like Half-Life. When using OpenGL it just crashes when loading a level, without any error message. Switched through the available options, but no luck yet.
Yea there seems to be a problem with the Glide wrapper feature of this wrapper - but I'm working on it.
Damn, I am going to show this port to my older brother. Thanks for port.
for some reason mine will only start in safe mode ... not sure how that works since its still emulating the pc
it crashes and brings up the crash log on the osx desktop
i have a 2010 macbook ( white unibody) running osx 10.11 and 10.9
this happens in both oses
it crashes and brings up the crash log on the osx desktop
i have a 2010 macbook ( white unibody) running osx 10.11 and 10.9
this happens in both oses
How do I open files ending in '.001'? When I click on the link, it takes me to a page with four files. I cannot figure out how to open any of them.
Mine launches fine, automatically in Full Screen (only way to get out is Cmd+Opt+Esc), but runs excruciatingly slowly (takes forever to render and often I get screen tearing).
I was also wondering if it's possible to install Windows XP or 7 in DOSBox, although I think it'd be too slow and unstable to be usable.
I was also wondering if it's possible to install Windows XP or 7 in DOSBox, although I think it'd be too slow and unstable to be usable.
MaestroTesseract, on 04 November 2016 - 10:17 PM, said:
Mine launches fine, automatically in Full Screen (only way to get out is Cmd+Opt+Esc), but runs excruciatingly slowly (takes forever to render and often I get screen tearing).
I was also wondering if it's possible to install Windows XP or 7 in DOSBox, although I think it'd be too slow and unstable to be usable.
I was also wondering if it's possible to install Windows XP or 7 in DOSBox, although I think it'd be too slow and unstable to be usable.
Mine too, and the colours are quite messed up: a workaround is setting the color depth to 256 colours, instead of 16 bit. Anyway, no, DOSBox can emulate DOS-based systems only: the latest DOS version is Windows ME (although DOS is somewhat concealed); from Windows 2000 onwards, DOS functions are just emulated. If you want to emulate 2000, XP or whatever NT version, you need VirtualBox or VMware.
The worst bug I found is the impossibility of accessing the drive C: from WinME through Computer.
Hello, when I try to download this port, the link keeps redirecting me to some 'registration' for Wi-Fi or something like that site. Why is this?
Install Windows 2000
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DOSBox is a cross-platform freeware application used to run DOS-based software from the 1980s and 1990s on today's computers. Occasionally, users want to install a program that was originally released on multiple floppy disks. Because most users no longer have or use a floppy drive, the individual floppies take the form of 'disk images,' virtual reproductions of the original floppies that can be 'mounted' onto virtual drives and used just like the original. Installing a multiple-floppy image program in DOSBox is done using a command called 'imgmount.' With this command, it is possible to mount multiple floppy images and install them as though from an actual floppy drive.
Step 1
Make sure that your floppy image files are in either .IMG or .ISO format. These are the two floppy image formats that DOSBox recognizes. If they are in another format, you will need to convert them to .IMG or .ISO using the utility of your choice. Some applications that can do this include WinImage and Magic Iso Maker.
Step 2
Open DOSBox. At the 'Z:' prompt -- DOSBox's internal virtual command line prompt -- type 'imgmount' followed by the letter of the virtual drive you want to create to mount the floppy images. Choose a drive letter not already represented on your system. For example, if you have no drive 'F:' type 'imgmount f' followed by a space. Do not press 'Enter' yet.
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Step 3
Type the path and name of each floppy image file in order. Multiple-floppy installations number the disks so that the user knows in what order to insert them for installation. For example, if there are four floppy images named 'gameX.img,' where 'X' represents the number of the disk, and they are in a folder named 'Game' on your 'C:' drive, type 'C:Gamegame1.img C:Gamegame2.img' and so on. Follow the last with a space and then type '-floppy.' This tells DOSBox what kind of images are to be mounted.
Step 4
Press 'Enter.' DOSBox will mount the floppy images onto the virtual drive. Note that DOSBox does not give each image its own drive letter. You can cycle through the different floppy images by pressing 'CTRL-F4.' Type 'cd X,' where 'X' represents the letter of the newly mounted virtual drive, and press 'Enter.' This will make the virtual drive the active drive. Type 'dir' and press 'Enter' to see a list of files on the first floppy image. One of these files will be the installation program, often called 'install.exe' or 'setup.exe.' Type the name of that file and press 'Enter.' The installation program will begin.
Press 'CTRL-F4' when the installation program asks for the next disk. This will tell DOSBox to cycle to the next floppy image mounted on the virtual drive you created. Continue pressing 'CTRL-4' whenever the installation program prompts you for another disk until the installation program completes.
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Install Windows 2000 Over Xp
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