esc wrote to All <=-
I have a 32 bit VM with DosEMU which allows 16 bit door games to work.
I have been able to install MajorBBS 6.25, barebones. I have created a virtual network via /dev/tun0 and have allowed MajorBBS to bind to some arbitrary fake IP address and bridge that to an actual ethernet card.
From inside the linux box itself, I can telnet to that IP successfully.
I might be wrong (i.e. it may have been pure user error), but I tried running a 32-bit linux vm on a 64-bit box. I got the networking working fine... both the host and the vm had their own IPA and could talk to each other and other network machines. However, I was not able to get the virtual network to extend to the dosemu instance running in the vm. I half-way wondered if it was because I was effectively running a vm (dosemu) inside of a vm.
this on TBBS. The reason I'm interested in MajorBBS and TBBS is
because their door games are unique and second to none. Anyone
interested in helping out?
Would love to participate... especially on reverse engineering their doors. I have been aquiring many door companies in the late 90's... so I have tons of doors -- however, I have the built tools to help me capture all ANSI streams. It would just require putting some heads together to guess the algorithms... and viola a new flavor of chocolate is born ;-)
this on TBBS. The reason I'm interested in MajorBBS and TBBS is because their door games are unique and second to none. Anyone interested in helping out?
Would love to participate... especially on reverse engineering their doors. have been aquiring many door companies in the late 90's... so I have tons o
What was interesting about TBBS was that it could run Dbase-III applications as doors. It made that software extremely appealing for businesses.
On 12 Feb 19 13:38:31, Ozz Nixon said the following to Esc:
this on TBBS. The reason I'm interested in MajorBBS and TBBSis
because their door games are unique and second to none.Anyone
interested in helping out?
Would love to participate... especially on reverse engineering
their doors. have been aquiring many door companies in the late
90's... so I have tons o
What was interesting about TBBS was that it could run Dbase-III applications as doors. It made that software extremely appealing for businesses.
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