-=> Skylar wrote to Nightfox <=-
Sk> GeoWorks performed *so* much better on a 286 than Windows 3.0 or 3.1
Sk> ever could. I had high hopes, but it never gained traction.
I had a 386sx/16 with 3 mb of RAM, and GeoWorks ran nicely. One thing
people haven't mentioned is that it had a set of nice GUI apps - the
word processor was decent, it had a little flat file DB, and a couple
of productivity apps that I used.
> I often thought it was a bummer that Windows became the dominant
> computer platform when there were better alternatives available.
I think the later versions came with TCP/IP access and some sort of
browser, but by then it was too late. All other OSes were run over by
third-party support in Windows.
Sk> I bought OS/2 and gave it a try around 1993. I thought it had potential but
Sk> we had major driver compatility issues. By then I'd been
Sk> programming for MS-DOS using Turbo Pascal and Turbo C++ for a few years and
Sk> much preferred staying in DOS when using a "PC".
In the corporate world, OS/2 rocked. I worked in an all-IBM shop from 1991-1993,
and with OS/2 1.3 and 2.0, I could run Word and Excel, a
comm app, connect to an AS/400 over twinax, share files over a token
ring network, and all of this on a 386/25 with 8 mb of RAM.
Later, managing a Netware network, all of the apps for managing the
network were DOS console apps. You could run multiple apps without
worrying about memory - or create a custom DOS environment if you needed
it.
It wasn't until TCP/IP that OS/2 fell behind. Windows 3.11 had the apps
and built-in TCP/IP.
... Grape soda is the most effective hand sanitizer.
--- MultiMail/Win v0.52
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