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Author Archives: Michal Necasek
Reconstructing the EGA BIOS
A few weeks ago I had a sudden need to understand certain finer points of the operation of EGA/VGA BIOS. I found common reference materials to be inadequate—they tend to do a good job of documenting the data structures the … Continue reading
Posted in BIOS, Development, Documentation, Graphics, IBM, PC history
32 Comments
Learn Something Old Every Day, Part IV: Ctrl+Scroll Lock is Ctrl+Break
The other day I tried running NSNIPES, a multiplayer networked game that came with old versions of NetWare. The game worked fine, but I couldn’t get out of it. Esc did nothing, any “usual” combinations like Alt+X, Alt+Q or similar … Continue reading
Posted in NetWare, PC architecture, PC history
3 Comments
KEYBCS2
After writing about the likely origins of IBM code page 852, I thought I should revisit the homegrown Czech alternative solution, the Kamenický brothers encoding and their keyboard driver. Its existence is well documented, and the so-called (somewhat misnamed) KEYBCS2 … Continue reading
Posted in DOS, I18N, IBM, x86
29 Comments
Where Did CP852 Come From?
In the 1990s, a lot of my documents were written in code page 852 (CP852), also known as PC Latin 2. This code page is sometimes called “Eastern European”, which is a bit misleading, given that it does not cover … Continue reading
Posted in DOS, I18N, IBM, Microsoft, OS/2, PC history
47 Comments
XMVM Surgery
Last week I was prompted to take a look at the Intel Code Builder compiler from 1991, a 32-bit compiler targeting 386 extended DOS and shipping with its own DOS extender. It is what one might call an extremely obscure … Continue reading
Posted in 386, Development, Intel, PC history, Software Hacks
10 Comments
Another Trip to Drive Geometry Hell
Recently I took another close look at the IDE.DSK driver in NetWare 3.12. Among other things, I wanted to know how it differs from ISADISK.DSK. On some systems, the two drivers are interchangeable and either will work. But there are … Continue reading
Posted in IDE, NetWare, PC history
8 Comments
Another Myth Busted
More than once I came across a story of a heroic MicroPro programmer who in an all-night session managed to port WordStar from CP/M to DOS by patching a single byte. This is how the legend was retold by Joel … Continue reading
Posted in CP/M, DOS, PC history, WordStar
5 Comments
Unidentified PC DOS 1.1 Boot Sector Junk Identified
Anyone trying to disassemble the PC DOS 1.1 boot sector soon notices that at offsets 1A3h through 1BEh there is a byte sequence that just does not belong. It appears to be a fragment of code, but it has no … Continue reading
Posted in Development, DOS, PC history
24 Comments
First Dual-Channel IDE?
The OS/2 Museum recently came into possession of what may be the first adapter with support for two IDE channels… sort of: The adapter was made by Plus Development Corporation, a subsidiary of the disk maker Quantum. This particular specimen … Continue reading
Posted in IDE, PC hardware, PC history, Quantum
29 Comments
LAN Manager 2.1/2.2 Registration
Anyone who spent a bit of time archiving software distributed on floppies probably knows this situation: There’s only one disk set of a given software release known to exist, and it’s not clean. That is, it’s been previously used to … Continue reading
Posted in Archiving, Debugging, Microsoft, Software Hacks
18 Comments