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University Challenge (Announce)

posted by kerravon E-mail, Ligao, Free World North, 27.03.2022, 14:05

> > > But that is not because Microsoft lacks competitors. Being a
> > > "monopoly" in this context merely means that the competing offerings
> to
> > > Microsoft's products — and there are many! — are not powerful
> > > enough to challenge Microsoft's dominant position.
> >
> > What I'm looking for as a competitor to Microsoft
> > is a company, be it IBM or Fujitsu or anyone else,
> > to produce a closed source (they almost certainly
> > need this) clone of Windows.
>
> you started this thread with
> "Your challenge is to produce a 32-bit competitor to MSDOS "
>
> now you step up the competition and go after Windows. Wow.

PDOS/386 is both a 32-bit version of MSDOS (where
there was nothing to clone) and a mini clone of
Windows. I failed to mention that at the beginning
of the thread because I've mentioned it in previous
threads. Plus the fact that I have a new design for
PDOS called PDOS-generic which is not going to be a
clone of Windows because I have a different design
in mind. It will continue to be close to MSDOS though.

> I am fairly certain that - should such a company ever exist - it will
> certainly not start from a more or less buggy '32 Bit clone' of MSDOS and
> put all the required multitasking stuff on top.
>
> The software industry simply doesn't work this way.

The software industry has very little public domain
code to use as a base, so it's not surprising that
they currently don't work that way.

What the free market does in the future I have no
idea.

The "company" may be an individual just using
PDOS/386 for some sort of industrial use. I really
have no idea.

All I'm doing is putting unrestricted public domain
code out there and then seeing what the hell happens.

If nothing happens, so be it.

BFN. Paul.

 

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