FreeDOS

FreeDOS (formerly Free-DOS and PD-DOS) is a free operating system for IBM PC compatible computers. It intends to provide a complete DOS-compatible environment for running legacy software and supporting embedded systems.

FreeDOS can be booted from a hard drive, live CD, USB flash drive or floppy disk. It can also be run using virtualization software like Virtual PC and VirtualBox or x86 emulation software like Bochs and QEMU.

Unlike MS-DOS, FreeDOS is composed of free and open source software, licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public License. Therefore, its base distribution does not require license fees or royalties and creation of custom distributions is permitted. However, other packages which form part of the FreeDOS project include non-GPL software considered worth preserving, such as 4DOS, which is distributed under a modified MIT license.

History

The FreeDOS project began 29 June 1994, after Microsoft announced it would no longer sell or support MS-DOS. Jim Hall then posted a manifesto proposing the development of an open-source replacement. Within a few weeks, other programmers including Pat Villani and Tim Norman joined the project. Between them, a kernel (by Villani), the COMMAND.COM command line interpreter (by Villani and Norman), and core utilities (by Hall) were created by pooling code they had written or found available. There have been several official pre-release distributions of FreeDOS before the final FreeDOS 1.0 distribution.GNU/DOS, an unofficial distribution of FreeDOS, was discontinued after version 1.0 was released.

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Latest News for: freedos

FreeDOS Celebrates More Than 30 Years of Command Prompts With New Release

Slashdot 13 Apr 2025
When Microsoft announced it would stop developing MS-DOS after 1995, college student Jim Hall "packaged my own extended DOS utilities, as did others," according to the web site for the resulting "FreeDOS" project.

FreeDOS 1.4: Still DOS, still FOSS, more modern than ever

The Register 09 Apr 2025
The 1990s called – they're impressed. The FreeDOS Project has released version 1.4 of its fully open source DOS-compatible OS – but you'll need a BIOS for bare metal ... .

FreeDOS 1.4 brings new life to old computers

Boing Boing 09 Apr 2025
The post FreeDOS 1.4 brings new life to old computers appeared first on Boing Boing.

FreeDOS 1.4 brings new fixes and features to modern and vintage DOS-based PCs

Ars Technica 07 Apr 2025
Over the weekend, the team that maintains FreeDOS ... FreeDOS creator and maintainer Jim Hall goes into more detail about the FreeDOS 1.4 changes here, and full release notes for the changes are here.

Review: Compact Freedo projector gets Google TV out and about

New Atlas 04 Apr 2025
Many portable projectors still need to be plugged in, but Dangbei's Freedo caters for cable-free watching for up to 2.5 hours ... The Freedo is mounted to a gimbal stand, which caters for projection flexibilityDangbei ... Freedo.
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