Lol Kintaro started ad hominem and Calum foolishly reacted to it - do either of you learn anything?Don't sart ad hominem and if someone else starts it, don't rise to it which only makes you look weaker, not stronger.Anyway, Kintaro is right about Windows 3.x being more than a GUI but whether it's an OS or not depends the definition of an operating system.
yes, but by finishing with the ad hominem, as you just did, it makes you look like you haven't a clue what you're talking about, because all you appear to be saying is that you think i am a twit, therefore your opinions must be right, and that really is stupid. Still, i guess you know a lot more about trolling than i do. PS - thanks for throwing in the word "should" again, love it when you do that.
You are wrong Calum, I first devised the logical flaw in your argument and then I said you don't know what you are talking about and from that I derived that you are a twit. So you have made yet ANOTHER logical fallacy, of reversing casualty to support your argument. Anyway, there is clearly no point debating you with reason so, next time you visit Australia: I challenge you to a duel. To the death.
Eh, you just keep repeating the same argument. It's based entirely on observation from a simple abstraction of events, you launch windows from DOS. You can launch Linux from Dos, and Windows 9x (where disk drivers are added and DOS code isn't used at all).
Eh, learn moar.
Hell, I am running three different OS's under VMware... Are they suddenly Applications?
The whole argument is bullshit anyway because no one has defined what an operating system is, for the purposes of this discussion.
i'd like to see you install MS Windows and not DOS and get the computer working. An OS makes your computer operate. Without DOS, 16 bit Windows does not do this. Arguments based on OS duties, functionality etc are secondary to this inescapable fact.PS - 32 bit windows is an OS because it does do this, whether it's based on MS DOS or not, if you get a Windows 95/98/2000 CD and install the system from it, you get a windows operating system, with DOS integrated (or emulated in some cases?) as part of it. But with 16 bit windows, the installer is a program that you run in DOS, just like every other DOS program is.simples.
Anyway, none of your points change the fact that Windows 3.11 puts the processor in protected mode and runs a virtual machine that emulates all of the features of DOS. When these are disk features, that magic in MSDOS.SYS does the real work. It doesn't really run on top of dos though, it runs an independent system that then provides an abstraction of some very small DOS features.