SLOS-Win: Difference between revisions
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==Download== | ==Download== | ||
'''[https://www.moonlightdesign.org/steve/programs/slosdist1.exe Download SLOS-DOS and SLOS-Win]''' | *'''[https://www.moonlightdesign.org/steve/programs/slosdist1.exe Download SLOS-DOS and SLOS-Win]''' | ||
*'''[https://www.moonlightdesign.org/steve/programs/sloswin.zip Download SLOS-Win's Source Code]''' | |||
'''[https://www.moonlightdesign.org/steve/programs/sloswin.zip Download SLOS-Win's Source Code]''' | *{{CatSetupFiles}} |
Latest revision as of 22:52, 14 October 2007
Steven Lawrance's Operating System (SLOS), also known briefly as Steven Lawrance's Operating Program (SL-OP), was a small interpreted toy operating environment written in QBASIC for DOS. The primary motivation for writing this was to have an environment that supported long file names. This was written in 1993 -- two years before Microsoft released native long file name support in a consumer operating system with Windows 95.
A small subset of the SLOS commands were implemented in this Windows version. Unfortunately, this Windows version cannot run most of the SLOS programs that were written.
Download
- Download SLOS-DOS and SLOS-Win
- Download SLOS-Win's Source Code
- Download CatSetup's required DLL files, if needed. Older versions of CatSetup required bwcc.dll, and the latest version requires ctl3dv2.dll. These go into the windows\system folder, not windows\system32. Windows computers typically already have ctl3dv2.dll installed, which is a Microsoft library, and Wine has a built-in implementation