- Thread starter
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B
Bill in Co.
letterman@invalid.com wrote:
> On Tue, 23 Sep 2008 00:07:48 -0600, "Bill in Co."
> <not_really_here@earthlink.net> wrote:
>
>> Jeff Richards wrote:
>>> It is a pointless argument that has been manufactured in order to
>>> consume
>>> bandwidth and provide some people with a platform for espousing
>>> particular
>>> viewpoints about the future direction of Windows. If it walks like a
>>> duck
>>> and quacks like a duck then it's probably a duck.
>>> --
>>> Jeff Richards
>>> MS MVP (Windows - Shell/User)
>>> "Dan" <Dan@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
>>> news:6F734987-D1F8-46D3-8420-1E60D209355F@microsoft.com...
>>>> Jeff, can we really call it DOS in Windows NT since I thought it was
>>>> just
>>>> a command prompt and this was Chris Quirke, mvp's big argument that the
>>>> maintenance operating system of DOS was missing in Windows NT.
>>
>> That sounds correct to me too.
>>
>>>> In addition,
>>>> why would early Microsoft engineers have called the "New Technology ---
>>>> Not There" if these software engineers were not referring to how the
>>>> underlying
>>>> maintenance operating system was missing in Windows NT. Sure, you have
>>>> a
>>>> Recovery Console in Windows XP but still no true maintenance operating
>>>> system like DOS at least according to Chris Quirke.
>>
>> I think Chris Quirke's correct, too. Just like here in Windows XP,
>> there
>> is no real DOS, per se, but there is a command shell (cmd.exe) that, in
>> many
>> ways, *acts* like DOS (and runs many similar commands).
>>
>> BUT - you CANNOT boot up to it as a separate operating system, as you can
>> in
>> Win9x, which has a real mode DOS underlying Win9x.
>>
>> Hence you may need some special utilities to work around this, like
>> NTFS4DOS, or Bart'sPE CD, etc, IF you want or need that special low level
>> access to the system. Or you can use the Recovery Console.
>>
>
> If a system has one of the versions of NT Windows, and is set to dual
> boot to either Dos
You CAN'T boot to real DOS unless you had previously installed DOS (say like
DOS 6.22), OR Win9X (which brings DOS with it), onto that drive. I'm NOT
talking about the pseudo-DOS cmd shell in XP or NT. I'm talking about the
old bonafide, bootable, real DOS operating system (versions 1.0 through 7.1
(which came with Win98SE, as I recall)
> or (for example) XP, -AND- The harddrive is
> formatted to Fat32, one can still access all the files on the drive,
> including the XP files.
Of course.
> I know this for fact because my laptop has
> Win2k installed, but I can boot to dos at startup (I get the dual boot
> option). Of course, I have no idea what to do to fix 2K, like I do
> with 98se.
But this has nothing to do with my original statement, that there is no real
DOS mode in NT or XP. There IS a command processor (cmd.exe) that runs
DOS-like commands in a box, however.
> On Tue, 23 Sep 2008 00:07:48 -0600, "Bill in Co."
> <not_really_here@earthlink.net> wrote:
>
>> Jeff Richards wrote:
>>> It is a pointless argument that has been manufactured in order to
>>> consume
>>> bandwidth and provide some people with a platform for espousing
>>> particular
>>> viewpoints about the future direction of Windows. If it walks like a
>>> duck
>>> and quacks like a duck then it's probably a duck.
>>> --
>>> Jeff Richards
>>> MS MVP (Windows - Shell/User)
>>> "Dan" <Dan@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
>>> news:6F734987-D1F8-46D3-8420-1E60D209355F@microsoft.com...
>>>> Jeff, can we really call it DOS in Windows NT since I thought it was
>>>> just
>>>> a command prompt and this was Chris Quirke, mvp's big argument that the
>>>> maintenance operating system of DOS was missing in Windows NT.
>>
>> That sounds correct to me too.
>>
>>>> In addition,
>>>> why would early Microsoft engineers have called the "New Technology ---
>>>> Not There" if these software engineers were not referring to how the
>>>> underlying
>>>> maintenance operating system was missing in Windows NT. Sure, you have
>>>> a
>>>> Recovery Console in Windows XP but still no true maintenance operating
>>>> system like DOS at least according to Chris Quirke.
>>
>> I think Chris Quirke's correct, too. Just like here in Windows XP,
>> there
>> is no real DOS, per se, but there is a command shell (cmd.exe) that, in
>> many
>> ways, *acts* like DOS (and runs many similar commands).
>>
>> BUT - you CANNOT boot up to it as a separate operating system, as you can
>> in
>> Win9x, which has a real mode DOS underlying Win9x.
>>
>> Hence you may need some special utilities to work around this, like
>> NTFS4DOS, or Bart'sPE CD, etc, IF you want or need that special low level
>> access to the system. Or you can use the Recovery Console.
>>
>
> If a system has one of the versions of NT Windows, and is set to dual
> boot to either Dos
You CAN'T boot to real DOS unless you had previously installed DOS (say like
DOS 6.22), OR Win9X (which brings DOS with it), onto that drive. I'm NOT
talking about the pseudo-DOS cmd shell in XP or NT. I'm talking about the
old bonafide, bootable, real DOS operating system (versions 1.0 through 7.1
(which came with Win98SE, as I recall)
> or (for example) XP, -AND- The harddrive is
> formatted to Fat32, one can still access all the files on the drive,
> including the XP files.
Of course.
> I know this for fact because my laptop has
> Win2k installed, but I can boot to dos at startup (I get the dual boot
> option). Of course, I have no idea what to do to fix 2K, like I do
> with 98se.
But this has nothing to do with my original statement, that there is no real
DOS mode in NT or XP. There IS a command processor (cmd.exe) that runs
DOS-like commands in a box, however.