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Tips for installing Windows 98 in QEMU/UTM

62 pointsby Bogdanpyesterday at 11:04 PM8 commentsview on HN

Comments

jacquesmtoday at 3:19 AM

Oh, this was very well timed, thank you. Not because I'm installing Windows 98 (over my dead body) but because I'm trying to get a little operating system I wrote in the early 90's to work in Qemu or VirtualBox. And the article contained a nice hint about the emulation hardware.

It is interesting how what worked flawlessly on the hardware of the time is almost impossible to get to work on these emulators, the fidelity is quite low. But bit by bit I'm making progress in figuring out where the differences are and how to work around them. I've got a basic self-hosted development system working now with all of the data in a ram disk. The floppy, keyboard and VGA screen all work, now I need to figure out why the harddrive controller keeps disappearing.

Oh well, the night is young ;)

Thank you for posting this! It really moved the needle in what already was a super long debug session.

LeoPantheratoday at 3:21 AM

If you want to try Windows 95 in UTM, I've done it for you.

https://archive.org/details/windows-95-for-utm

TazeTSchnitzeltoday at 4:51 AM

It won't be a great experience, but for MIDI, wouldn't Microsoft GS Wavetable Synth suffice? Doesn't that come with Windows 98? If it's trying to use the nonexistent Ad Lib support, you can probably tell it to use GS Wavetable Synth instead in the MIDI settings?

hauntertoday at 12:59 AM

How does Windows 98 work with the fingertouch interface of the iPad? There were some very expensive touchscreen Windows tablets back in the late 90s but they all used a stylus and generally the responsiveness was very slow

show 2 replies
selimnairbtoday at 3:15 AM

If you don’t need to run on iPad, Windows 98 works great on DOSBox, including audio and CD.