aeon1405241541 0 Report post Posted February 20, 2007 After a successful upgrade from Windows 9x,ME,NT or SE to Microsoft Windows XP some of us may disappointed when try to run our favorite software that worked with previous version of Windows. You may see a massage like this ”thisprogram requires Windows98. Yes, the program is not designed for windows XP. After a long search I found a solution to run my softwares for windows 98/95/me/NT under windows XP !! Experts saying that: MS-DOS was a 16-bit platform. Windows 3.1 ran on top of MS- DOS and was also a 16-bit platform. Lots of software was written for MS-DOS and Windows 3.1. When Microsoft released Windows 95, which was a 32-bit operating system, it maintained backward compatibility so that older, 16-bit programs would still run on Windows 95. Windows 95 meshed 16-bit and 32-bit code with MS-DOS at its core. Most 16-bit MS-DOS- and Windows 3.1-based programs would work fine on Windows 95, and programmers were free to write 32-bit programs for the newer operating system. Windows 95, 98, and Me were all based on the same core technology (called kernel), and all had about the same tolerance for running older applications. Windows XP is based on a completely different kernel. It’s built on code that was introduced in Windows NT, evolved into Windows 2000, and was enhanced for Windows XP. The Windows NT kernel doesn’t have any MS-DOS components in it at all—it’s a pure 32-bit beast. It includes a 16-bit emulator and a command prompt mode that looks like MS-DOS. Get what behind this phenomena. ? Now Windows XP is already packed with a solution for this problem faced my most of their users. “Microsoft is always one step ahead” and “Our potential is their passion” !! Here is the simple solution for this. solution from a part we normally ignored/neglected !!. yes from the categories OS Windows”Help and Support” If you receive an error message like this, open the Program Compatibility Wizard to help you test compatibility settings that may fix the problem. To open the Program Compatibility Wizard Click Start, click Help and Support, click Fixing a problem. Click Application and software problems. Click Getting older programs to run on Windows XP. Click the Start the Program Compatibility Wizard link. On the next page, you can select whether to run the program in 256 color mode, to run it at a screen resolution of 640 x 480, and to disable visual themes. Windows XP themes can disrupt games designed for older operating systems. If the game you’re trying to run looks odd when you run it, experiment with these options. Same way you can use Old Games, Applications,Packages,3D Softwares….. Seems helpful ? Comment on it. Want to get more follow the link Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
faulty.lee 0 Report post Posted February 20, 2007 After a successful upgrade from Windows 9x,ME,NT or SE to Microsoft Windows XP some of us may disappointed when try to run our favorite software that worked with previous version of Windows. You may see a massage like this âthisprogram requires Windows98. Yes, the program is not designed for windows XP. After a long search I found a solution to run my softwares for windows 98/95/me/NT under windows XP !! Experts saying that: MS-DOS was a 16-bit platform. Windows 3.1 ran on top of MS- DOS and was also a 16-bit platform. Lots of software was written for MS-DOS and Windows 3.1. When Microsoft released Windows 95, which was a 32-bit operating system, it maintained backward compatibility so that older, 16-bit programs would still run on Windows 95. Windows 95 meshed 16-bit and 32-bit code with MS-DOS at its core. Most 16-bit MS-DOS- and Windows 3.1-based programs would work fine on Windows 95, and programmers were free to write 32-bit programs for the newer operating system. Windows 95, 98, and Me were all based on the same core technology (called kernel), and all had about the same tolerance for running older applications. Windows XP is based on a completely different kernel. Itâs built on code that was introduced in Windows NT, evolved into Windows 2000, and was enhanced for Windows XP. The Windows NT kernel doesnât have any MS-DOS components in it at allâitâs a pure 32-bit beast. It includes a 16-bit emulator and a command prompt mode that looks like MS-DOS. Get what behind this phenomena. ? Now Windows XP is already packed with a solution for this problem faced my most of their users. âMicrosoft is always one step aheadâ and âOur potential is their passionâ !! Here is the simple solution for this. solution from a part we normally ignored/neglected !!. yes from the categories OS WindowsâHelp and Supportâ If you receive an error message like this, open the Program Compatibility Wizard to help you test compatibility settings that may fix the problem. To open the Program Compatibility Wizard Click Start, click Help and Support, click Fixing a problem. Click Application and software problems. Click Getting older programs to run on Windows XP. Click the Start the Program Compatibility Wizard link. On the next page, you can select whether to run the program in 256 color mode, to run it at a screen resolution of 640 x 480, and to disable visual themes. Windows XP themes can disrupt games designed for older operating systems. If the game youâre trying to run looks odd when you run it, experiment with these options. Same way you can use Old Games, Applications,Packages,3D SoftwaresâŚ.. Seems helpful ? Comment on it. Want to get more follow the link This method doesn't works all the time. For those that works, is usually those program that compliant itself not running win win9x environment. Btw, you can also right click on the exe, then select property, then compatibility. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
xboxrulz1405241485 0 Report post Posted February 20, 2007 ya, they have a better compatibility layer on Vista, where most programs do work through there, if they are not directly attached to DOSxboxrulz Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Markymark2 0 Report post Posted February 20, 2007 Notice from Mark420: This topic is basically stolen from here..http://forums.xisto.com/no_longer_exists/Also you have posted it on your blog..with images stolen from this website also..Be aware that people can and DO look for thier copyrighted content on the internet and DO find them and DO take action against people that steal their content.And also if you have a look at where you stole it from..hmm Microsoft..now look at the footer of thier page..© 2007 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved,good luck fighting them in court if it comes to that!Basically by posting this here you have broken the Xisto rules.If a topic contains content from someone elses website this is WRONG,unless you put it in quotes like I have with this post.I would normally just straight delete this thread but I see other members have replied and I dont want to take credits from them also.Consider yourself warned! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites