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jonathanmoore's avatar
jonathanmoore
Copper Contributor
May 27, 2024

Windows 10 and 2003

I'm 46, building Virtual Box VM's Internal Workstation Servers on Windows NT 3.5, NT 4.0, Windows XP and Windows Server 2003. From a retired Gold Partner Shared Source Microsoft Contract. I would like to know it anyone is interested and if so where is the ACM at a NAT downstream internet if there is such a thing or what I would need to connect older computers to the internet.? My Startup Idea is a Virginia Computer Museum with older computers such as the MITS Altair, OpenVMS, CTSS from XKL and other UNIX and System V variants. Using Alpha, VAX, MIPS and x86 architecture. I'm trying to find a Jazz Computer. Also Novell DR-DOS and MS-DOS and NetWare. I've been working with SCO Skunkware and OpenServer v5 source in Windows Server 2003 Services for UNIX also Windows Embedded 2009 Standard to use the SDL engineering files. I've made a Lab03_n Buffer Lab for Vista. from documentation from the beta wiki. And I've been trying to contact Microsoft's Code Center Priemium, but nobody replies. I participated in Microsoft Bizspark with came with Windows CE Shared Source editions Also my HP FTP cache. Also I make FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD VM's with the Common Desktop Environment. VM's with OpenStep, OS/2 and System V from AT&T. I try to find all of the telnet servers. Also Perl, Apache, and GNU caches.

Thank You,

Jonathan

2 Replies

  • Bhavikaki's avatar
    Bhavikaki
    Copper Contributor
    For your VMs, you might want to consider using virtualization software like VirtualBox, VMware, or QEMU to create virtual machines for your older operating systems.
  • Michelleebla's avatar
    Michelleebla
    Copper Contributor
    You can use VirtualBox or VMware to create VMs for these operating systems. The Common Desktop Environment (CDE) is an X11-based desktop environment that was widely used in the 1990s.