Category Archives:286
Missing XENIX Disks
The previously mentioned warez mega dump contains disk images of SCO 286 XENIX 2.1.0. The release appears to be from February 1986. It is the oldest SCO 286 XENIX release that I know of. But there’s a hitch. The warez …Continue reading→
Who Knew What When
When Microsoft released the unique early beta build of Multitasking DOS 4, I quickly found out that it does not run in VirtualBox: This was a bit of a surprise, because the more-or-less released versions of Multitasking DOS 4 from …Continue reading→
Xenix 2.2 vs. VGA
The other day I started wondering why certain old versions of 286 and 386 XENIX look a bit weird in emulation: The characters are cut off, because XENIX sets up an EGA text mode with 8×14 character matrix but uses …Continue reading→
1987 Networking: ELS NetWare 286 Level I 2.0a
A rare find recently turned up: NetWare from 1987, specifically the low-end ELS variant of NetWare 286 version 2.0a (ELS may be claimed to mean Entry Level System or maybe Entry Level Server, but at least originally it stood for …Continue reading→
Another Strange 286 Board
The OS/2 Museum sometimes seems to have a knack for acquiring hardware so obscure that it cannot be even identified. One of the more recent arrivals was a seemingly typical Baby AT 286 board with an 8 MHz CPU. The …Continue reading→
FasterModeSwitch: Is It Really?
Short answer: Yes. Before launching into the long answer, let’s recap what it even is. FasterModeSwitch is a SYSTEM.INI setting in Windows 3.1 which applies only to Standard (286) mode and can therefore be found in the [standard] section of …Continue reading→
The A20-Gate: It Wasn’t WordStar
Although WordStar was long suspected to be the reason (or at least one of the major reasons) for implementing the A20 gate hardware on the PC/AT and all the associated problems later on, it is now all but certain that …Continue reading→
SGDT/SIDT Fiction and Reality
PSA: Actual hardware behavior takes precedence over vendor documentation. Or, as they say… trust but verify. A reader recently complained how Intel and AMD do not implement the SGDT and SIDT instructions the same way. AMD documentation states that these …Continue reading→
There’s More to the 286 XENIX Story
It turns out that there is a rather interesting story behind the 286 XENIX incompatibility with 386 and later processors. Here’s roughly what happened in chronological order. In 1982, Intel released the iAPX 286 processor, later known as the 80286 or simply 286. This …Continue reading→
IBM XENIX: Two Steps Forward
There are reasons to revisit an old topic. Very old, considering that IBM Xenix 1.0 was released in 1984, well over 30 years ago. To recap, this version of Xenix is unique in that it runs only on 286 processors. It …Continue reading→
