How about using one of the extended disk formats - 1.68MB or whatever format IBM Used for their OS/2 floppies? or is that not bootable? (This format was at least readable by standard 1.44 MB drives using standard 1.44MB disks.. ) Interesting challenge ! On Sat, Sep 5, 2020 at 7:20 PM Richard Cini via vcf-midatlantic < vcf-midatlantic@lists.vcfed.org> wrote:
Not really sure what applicability this really has, but today’s challenge was to get Windows 3.11 Enhanced Mode running from a single 1.44MB floppy disk. There are easy ways to get Standard mode running, including using files from “precopy.cab” on Windows 95 or 98, but this was way more challenging. I started from a full install and pared it down using a guide I found (which was a two-disk solution).
The boot files and required extras (HIMEM, PKUNZIP and a very small ramdrive driver) took about 300K, leaving only about 1.2MB (1.156MB to be exact) for a complete install. A normal no-frills install is about 3-ish megabytes.
There are significant compromises – no virtual memory, no networking, no multimedia, only system fonts, and only a few apps, but once running you could run them from another floppy. I discovered that 386Enh won’t put a temporary swapfile on a RAM drive, so it runs without it.
I guess you could call this the 1992 version of PortableApps :-)
Rich
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Rich Cini