Anyway, I had the craving for a serious strategy game like this for years but couldn't run it on a new PC until someone told me about DOS BOX. Well, I finally found the time to download the program and installed it on my PC , fiddled with the application for a while and installed my game and...
Windows 95 Img Dosbox Download And Set
THANKS A LOT!!!, I kept finding broken links, even in ftp sites that listed the file but the download didn't start.FINALLY!!!.hehe, I've been playing with a win95 computer for the last couple of days and I want to access a win7 shared folder to copy stuff easily, this will help a lot!.
*WARNING* Installation of PIT requires you to modify your AUTOEXEC file so that your computer knows where to find Tcl. The AUTOEXEC file is one of two files that make your computer run properly, so it is possible to seriously adversely affect the operation of your computer while modifying this file. If you follow the steps outlined below and make only the changes listed, there should not be a problem. If you are uncomfortable making these changes yourself then it is recommended that you have someone experienced in this type of work do it for you. Any problems that arise due to modification of this file are the responsibility of only one person - you, or the person who makes the changes if that is not you. You will need a way to unzip the files listed below. If you know your way around DOS you can use PKUNZIP that comes with Windows 95 and WinNT. If you don't then you will need to get a Windows program that does the same thing. A good one to use is WinZip, which you can get from their website. There are several files that you will need to download - PIT.zip this zipped file contains all of the files required to run PIT except for those listed below; tcl804.exe is packaged with this file and will install Tcl/Tk 8.0* on your computer, which is necessary for the proper operation of the PIT interface
Once you have downloaded these files you will need to follow these instructions - Create a new folder called PIT on your hard drive. Create a new folder called PIT Images on your hard drive at the same level as PIT. Unzip PIT.zip into the PIT folder. Double-click on tcl804.exe to install Tcl/Tk 8.0.* Add the following to your system PATH (**) - c:/program files/tcl/bin Unzip the image files into the PIT Images folder. To execute PIT, double click on the file named "pit.bat" in your PIT folder. Depending on the file manager you use, the ".bat" extension may not be shown and the file type may be listed as an MS-DOS file. For convenience, you will likely wish to tie the execution file to a screen icon. * You will first be asked to enter a location for the distribution. The default should be fine but you may specify a different location if you choose. It is recommended that you not specify your PIT folder (or a folder within your PIT folder) which may complicate future updates to your PIT distribution. The Tcl/Tk 8.0 installation process may ask additional questions depending on how your system is configured. If you already have Tcl/Tk 8.0 (or after installing it), the file "tcl804.exe" can be deleted. ** This is to make it possible for PIT to find Tcl when you start the program. If you do not set this correctly then when you try to start PIT it will give you an error stating that the file "tcl80.dll" can not be found in the PATH. On WinNT, to set your PATH follow these steps: right click on the "My Computer" icon and then Properties
click on the Environment tab
under "User Variables" click on the PATH line
in the Value field near the bottom of the window add the following at the end of the line - ;c:/program files/tcl/bin - make sure you separate the last entry from your new entry with a semi-colon (no spaces)
click "Set"
click "Apply"
click "OK"
run PIT
On Windows 95 follow these steps:
CSE 413 Home page Administration Syllabus Grading Topic Outline Accommodations Classwork Calendar Exams Software Other Links Email list Info Archive Software ToolsThe software packages for this class are installed in the Math Sciences Computing Center. The download files provided here are only needed if you are doing the course work on some othersystem.
The DrScheme interpreter is available from the Scheme website for free download. DrScheme runs on Windows (95 and up), Mac OS, or Unix running the X Window System. DrScheme is useful given at least 128 MB of RAM. Installing DrScheme requires roughly 40 MB of disk space.
A local copy of the Windows installer (plt-208-bin-i386-win32.exe)is available. Installers for other systems (and the source files) can be found at the Scheme website. After downloading, run the installer program and a wizard will guide you through the installation process. When you first run the program, select "Standard (R5RS)" as the language.
Download the installer from the Sun web pages (java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/download.html). The Java 2 SDK can be installed and run on Windows 95/98/NT/W2000/XP and most Unix variants, including Linux and Sun/Solaris. Java 2 version 1.3 is included with Mac OS X, so you should be able to run the course software on OS X without having to install Java 2 first. Java 2 is not available for the classic Mac OS (OS 9 and earlier).
To install, double-click on the installer program, and then follow the instructions. The Windows installer itself is fairly small, but it will download large files before actually doing the installation.
Sun provides excellent documentation for all the class libraries that are part of the Java platform. I strongly recommend that you download and install the documentation. Unfortunately, the download file is also very large (31MB), but it is very useful to have the documentation at your finger tips while you are programming. The documentation is available from the same place you downloaded the JDK (java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/download.html#docs) in the form of a large zip file. Download it, and unzip it into the same directory where you installed Java itself. For example, I will unzip the documentation for J2SE 1.4.2 into C:\apps\jdk142. This will give you all the html files that describe the Java libraries. If you add a link in your browser bookmarks, then you can get the documentation for any library method with just a few clicks of the mouse.
Secondary Magnification Window: Additional magnified views that can be placed over the "primary magnification window" or the "unmagnified view." "Secondary magnification windows" are usually designed for specific purposes. For example, a "secondary magnification window" can be placed over the time, so it is always magnified.
The books will come, in large part, from blind consumers themselves. In the past year, blind people who have scanned and stored books over the years have been sharing their files with Bookshare. "One man," Fruchterman reports, "has scanned over 4,000 books in the past decade and is eager to share all of them." In the hands of Bookshare, books will be converted to both braille (BRF) files and digital talking book (DAISY) formats to offer virtually every reading choice that consumers may prefer for downloading.
The ID Mate comes with a large-print version of the users' manual, as well as one on audiocassette. After you purchase it, you can download the manual from the manufacturer's web site with a user name and password. The large-print manual is in a 13-point font and may be difficult for some visually impaired individuals to read. A 16-point font would be an improvement. No braille manual or quick reference guide is included with the ID Mate.
Both products offer magnification up to 16 times and have four different types of "primary magnification windows" that can be repositioned and resized. ZoomText Xtra also offers magnification in five "secondary magnification windows" that can be placed over the "primary magnification window." In MAGic, the borders of the "primary magnification window" can be adjusted in thickness and color. MAGic offers vertical "stretching" of the screen. ZoomText Xtra offers both vertical and horizontal "stretching" of the screen.
Both MAGic and ZoomText Xtra offer "tracking" of the mouse, caret, menus, windows, and controls. In ZoomText Xtra, the delay period before any new activity is tracked can be adjusted. A boundary that allows "tracking" to take place only within a certain area of the screen can also be set up.
In this issue, Deborah Kendrick interviews Jim Fruchterman, the dreamer as well as the charismatic, driving force behind the creation of Arkenstone, the company that developed the first Windows-based reading system for blind people. Fruchterman discusses Arkenstone's history and focuses on his new dream. BookShare will be a web-based collection of books that have been scanned by blind consumers and can be downloaded by U.S. residents who provide proof of visual impairment and pay a small annual membership fee. This idea is an example of the kind of innovation that takes us beyond the necessities. Yes, we need access to the applications necessary to perform our jobs. But we also need to learn, to escape from work, and to have some fun.
In the years 1995-1997, SuperMemo World worked over a new hypermedia paradigm for SuperMemo, initially released as a separate line codenamed Genius. Most importantly, Genius departed from question-and-answer limitation of earlier versions of SuperMemo. In Genius all items/elements could be freely composed of various components such as text, sounds, pictures, etc. Secondly, Genius introduced knowledge hierarchy that made it possible to organize knowledge into a knowledge tree (contents window). Genius was originally released only as a hypermedia shell for CD-ROM titles such as Video English, Cross Country, etc. For long, Genius could not gain hearts of die-hard users of SuperMemo 7. Only in May 1997, the decision was taken to release Genius as an independent self-learning tool: SuperMemo 8. This was the first SuperMemo that was beta-tested around the world over the Internet and the first that was simultaneously released as a CD-ROM title (Deine Chancen) and a stand-alone application. It was also first commercial SuperMemo available for download from the Internet (June 1997). Successors of SuperMemo 8 will have always been first released as stand-alone applications over the Internet before the CD-ROM releases could be developed for traditional distribution channels. 2ff7e9595c
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