What remains from the Program Manager on Windows 98 is just an empty interface with full nothing at all, so it's pretty clear that the Program Manager became a useless thing as more versions of Windows come out.
The Progman trick works all the way until Windows XP SP1, with the Progman.exe being replaced by a dummy file that no longer functions when you install SP2.
At 3:05 you mention the files needed for the VM to run are from "build 326", but I think that you meant "build 328". Just want to make you aware of a subtitle mistake. Salutations dès l'Espagne :)
Glad you liked it! Frhed is the name of the hexadecimal editor I used to modify the win31 executable. v1.0.154 is compatible with 9x, link is in the description. HxD is another hex editor that some version might be run on 9x too ;)
Hi! The first machine is an IBM PC 350 (Model 6587), Pentium P54CS @ 200MHz, 144MB of RAM, Voodoo Banshee 2, Yamaha Audician 32 sound card with a DreamBlaster X2 wavetable. The second computer is a custom build that ran, at the time of the video, with an Acorp 694XT1 motherboard saved from the recycle bin, a Pentium III 900/256/100, 512MB of RAM, a GeForce 2MX GPU, and a Creative Audigy 2 sound card. As I got some issue with it for the next video, I changed the motherboard for a Gigabyte ga-60mm7e and upgraded the cpu to a Pentium III 1000/256/133 (As it turns out, the motherboard was not the issue). The hard drive bays are generic "Super Rack" IDE sets that are quite common on the flea market here :)
@@ii_Spectre Doesn't matter? Really? What kind of person mistakes French for Spanish? It would be understandable if it was Portuguese instead of French.
All of my old computers are connected to a domain run by a Windows Server 2003 machine. When a user logs in, a custom script is triggered to mount the network shares automatically (with the NET USE command), and a pop-up informs the user that a script is being executed.
@@druka-grey yeah, always thought that drive sleds on systems like that are neat, I have a few computers that I constantly swap drives out of because I test certain sets of hardware and software sometimes. That would be pretty nifty to have.
I'm interested to see if Windows 3.11 can run on this backwards compatibility layer Edit: It can, mostly any version of 3.1 will run. 3.1, 3.11, 3.11 for workgroups, it will all work Also notice that the actual latest build with the feature still available was Build 328, specified in BetaWiki.
windows NT won't probably handle that.. because of its virtual DOS machine (as there is no longer a real dos 16bit platform running underneath, so everything requiring direct hardware access semantics on its own, and not via NT's HAL, will fail to do so (these dualmouse drivers e.g., since .DRV and .386 drivers are not using that since relying on legacy hw access strategies). And Windows NT has lots of 32Bit stuff already, except for maybe UI elements (like in these 3.5 versions, which still looks like Windows 3.1). Windows NT might also require to be installed on a FAT16 filesystem, not under NTFS of course.
Oui, je me disais que je toucherai un public plus large avec des vidéos en Anglais. J'espère pouvoir proposer des sous-titres en Français prochainement.
Merci ! si tu parles du premier, c'est un truc que j'ai fait : www.deviantart.com/druka-grey/art/wallpaper-zip-910525772 Le second est trouvable ici : wallpapersafari.com/w/zR0IAa
Oui ! Je n'ai pas rencontré de soucis, à part quelques rares glitches graphiques de l'interface dans 98 et ME. Je n'ai pas trouvé de réel utilité comme il y a beaucoup de limitations et que les apps de 3.x fonctionnent généralement bien sur 95 et 98, mais ça reste un truc à essayer :p
@@druka-grey oui, pour le trip de pouvoir ouvrir un OS dans un autre avec quelques manips intéressantes à faire quand on apprend à utiliser Windows plus en profondeur