jimras Posted December 12, 2006 Report Share Posted December 12, 2006 OK, experts, here's my problemI have a lot of older DOS games that I'd like to install and have available for the grandkidswhen they come over for Christmas but Ican't get them to install.Most of them have a install.exe programand when I double click on it, I get a screenthat askes what drive to install the program onand it doesn't automatically enter "C:\" and whenI try to type in the C. I get a little beep but nothing shows on the screen.The ONLY think I can think of is that I am using aLogitech cordless keyboard thru my USB port.I have tried telling it to run in Win95 compatibilitymode without success.Any ideas?????Thanks..................jim Quote Link to post Share on other sites
garmanma Posted December 12, 2006 Report Share Posted December 12, 2006 (edited) There is no real DOS in XP. I googled " XP and DOS" and got a few sites that might be of help.MarkDOS games in XPAnd here Edited December 12, 2006 by garmanma Quote Link to post Share on other sites
blim Posted December 12, 2006 Report Share Posted December 12, 2006 Yup....and even though XP has a "backward compatability thingy", it doesn't always work with all games. Son discovered this when trying to install his Windows98 games on the new XP. Some worked, some didn'tDo you have an old computer you could hook up for the Grandkids so they could play those games? Often I see computers at Goodwill--never looked closely enough to see which OS they have on them, but I'm betting they aren't XP! I sure know what you're thinking as those old games are just as fun or even funner than the "fancy new games" (which is why Son will never part with his SNES! )Liz Quote Link to post Share on other sites
garmanma Posted December 12, 2006 Report Share Posted December 12, 2006 You could also partition and dual boot, or possibly try a DOS emulatorMarkSourceforge.net Quote Link to post Share on other sites
garmanma Posted December 12, 2006 Report Share Posted December 12, 2006 Yup....and even though XP has a "backward compatability thingy", it doesn't always work with all games. Son discovered this when trying to install his Windows98 games on the new XP. Some worked, some didn'tDo you have an old computer you could hook up for the Grandkids so they could play those games? Often I see computers at Goodwill--never looked closely enough to see which OS they have on them, but I'm betting they aren't XP! I sure know what you're thinking as those old games are just as fun or even funner than the "fancy new games" (which is why Son will never part with his SNES! )LizKill 2 birds with 1 stone. You can also use the box to try out Linux. That's what I'm going to try with the one in my closetMark Quote Link to post Share on other sites
CurlingSteve Posted December 13, 2006 Report Share Posted December 13, 2006 (edited) The "compatibility" settings only fool the program into thinking it's running an earlier OS.When the program asks for OS version (and/or several other settings) XP spoofs it using stock answers or customized WIN.INI/CONFIG.SYS type responses.When I have trouble installing from an older CD/floppy, this sometimes works.Copy the entire contents to a folder on the hard drive, remove the CD/floppy, then try the install.exe in that new folder.If that doesn't work, try "compatibility mode" settings for that install.exe program. Edited December 13, 2006 by CurlingSteve Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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