Separate names with a comma.
Excerpt from http://toucharcade.com/2010/10/26/idos/#comments : "For anybody needing Windows 3.1 : www.icascot.com/WINDOWS31.ISO.zip (extract it,...
IIRC, Jazz works OK.
16 MB was more than sufficient back in 1995. I could use it with even 4 MB of RAM - with 16MB, almost everything worked flawlessly.
You might want to reconfigure your particular game, unless it uses automatic audio card discovery.
It's a Windows-only app and won't run under plain DOS.
1. del *.* on your iPad, making sure you back up your config files first 2. or, mass-selection in iTunes and pressing the Delete button (at least...
Wowz! Have always loved Xenon2!
Yup, it does have write permissions to the whole iOS File System... just take at the screenshot I've made on my non-jailbroken, iOS 4.2b3 iPad:...
Would be interested in this too... on other (older) mobile platforms, MIDI wasn't supported in DOSBOX ports because of the very high CPU needs....
just pull the files into the File Sharing list on the Apps tab on the right from Finder / Windows Explorer after selecting "iDOS" on the left pane:
Another screenshot of showing GW-Basic in action:
It seems all of them. Haven't tested all modes of all of them (e.g., the 640*200 mono mode of CGA) yet, though.
Sure you can - but it won't have any severe consequences, particularly not if your desktop is a Mac.
yeah, I can play through my Legend Entertainment games again, now, on the iPad :)
You must zip them - folder copying can only be made from the mobile device.
Up until approximately 1995, all of them. I've tested most of them under the WinMo version of DOSBOX ports; they all worked.
It has a command-line interface - just like all DOSBOX ports. Also, you can edit the config file to auto-start titles on bootup if you prefer.
If you like(d) DOS games, it's a must. And very cheap - PocketDOS on WinMo started at $10, and it doesn't even support audio cards.
Just make sure you back up the IPA so that subsequent updates don't remove free game adding capabilities, as was the case with the C64 emulator ;-)
Wow! 386 protected mode heaven! Something the WinMo ports weren't really capable of - or, at least, at a usable speed.