Examples of using Dosbox in English and their translations into Vietnamese
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Colloquial
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Computer
Use DOSBox to play.
These versions will require DOSBox.
I have tried on DosBox and it didn't work.
Play old DOS games with DOSBox.
DOSBox brings hundreds of classic games back to life.
So my advice is to just use DosBox.
How to use DOSBox to run old programs and applications?
Already, it will help you to better configure DOSBox.
So how to configure DOSBox so that you can fully enjoy the game as I do in the video?
D-Fend Reloaded is a graphical environment for DOSBox.
If you install a DOS emulator like DosBox, you can run DOS applications in a 64-bit environment.
DBGL serves as a frontend/ Graphical User Interface to DOSBox( configuration).
However, If you have a standard gamepad, DOSBox is going, to set it up automatically for you, if you place this line to AUTO.
In the process of making this,I never once had to touch the DOSBox source code!
And I know that many will say that higher than 20000, DOSBox will advises you to put it in dynamic and percentage mode.
Windows XP comes with an emulator called DOS Virtual Machine,subsequent versions of Windows require an emulator such as DosBox.
All versions require DOSBox in order to play but the GOG version will have DOSBox built in and not require any custom setup.
X programs as MS-DOS programs, attempting to run them in DOSBox(which does not work).[80].
DOSBox won't help you run Windows games at all, but it will allow you to run PC games written for DOS PCs before Windows existed.
However, it was soon discovered that if you ran the game in DOSbox, software that allows gamers to play older PC games on their modern computers, the game would work.
So, regardless of who you are, if you are in a winter mood, I happily recommend this game, even thoughyou might rage a little bit while trying to configure it properly in DOSBox.
Today, programmers sometimes use DOS emulators, such as DOSBox, to run QuickBASIC on Linux and on modern personal computer hardware that no longer supports the compiler.
Commercial versions of the original game are available from a number of digital distributors, all of which work with modern operating systems out of the box anddo not require players to be proficient with DOSBox.
And even there, when we see videos of the DOS version of the game,people don't seem to know how to properly configure DOSBox which results that video output does not do justice to the game.
In the introduction, I mentioned that people were misconfiguring DOSBox like total morons, which lead to the aftereffect of not only having very few people these days that have seen the magnitude of how cool was this game, but it bluntly gave a bad image to the game.
The need to restart the computer in real mode MS-DOS declined after Windows 3.1x until it was no longer supported in Windows ME. The only way of currently running DOS applications that require real mode from within newer versions ofWindows is by using emulators such as DOSBox or x86 virtualization products.
Currently, the original Civilization is only available on abandonware websites andwill require DOSBox, alternatively, there are a number of freeware remakes including FreeCiv which can run in either a Civ I or Civ II mode, emulating the original commercial games very closely.
But this advise was given a few years ago because at the epoch most PC that was running the emulator werenot enough performant to enjoy completely the DOSBox emulation, but if you have a more recent machine than 2007, you shouldn't have any problems to put cycles to 50000, even with a low-end machine!
So, you really must had the game configured to Sound Blaster 16 channels in order to fully experience the game,thing which at the time(and even ourdays, as DOSBox does not emulate the drivers of 16 channels, 16 channels that should not be confused with the 16 bits and 8 bits, which are very different…) almost nobody had played.