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  2. DOSBox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOSBox

    DOSBox is a free and open-source emulator which runs software for MS-DOS compatible disk operating systems—primarily video games. [5] It was first released in 2002, when DOS technology was becoming obsolete. Its adoption for running DOS games is widespread, with it being used in commercial re-releases of those games as well.

  3. Virtual DOS machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_DOS_machine

    MS-DOS Player for Win32-x64, a Microsoft MS-DOS Emulator, runs many command line DOS programs like compilers or other tools, also packaged into one standalone executable file. vDOS, a DOS emulator designed for the running the more "serious" DOS apps (not games) on 64-bit NT systems (effectively a replacement for NTVDM on modern systems).

  4. DOSEMU - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOSEMU

    DOSEMU is an option for people who need or want to continue to use legacy DOS software; in some cases virtualisation is good enough to drive external hardware such as device programmers connected to the parallel port. According to its manual, "dosemu" is a user-level program which uses certain special features of the Linux kernel and the 80386 ...

  5. List of computer system emulators - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_computer_system...

    Cross-platform/POSIX API: binary for 32-bit Raspberry Pi 4/400 GPL3: ee9 V11 May 15, 2024: English Electric KDF9: Cross-platform/POSIX API: binaries for 64-bit Raspberry Pi 4/400, Intel macOS Mojave through Sonoma, ARM macOS Sonoma, and 64-bit Intel Linux (also runs under FreeBSD and Windows 10/Windows 11 with WSL). Includes a Pascal cross ...

  6. MAME - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MAME

    MESS, an emulator for many video game consoles and computer systems, based on the MAME core, was integrated into MAME in 2015. With OTVDM (WineVDM) a version of MAME is available to emulate 16-Bit DOS and Windows applications on x64 and AArch64 versions of Windows. The NTVDM from Microsoft is only supported for the 32-bit versions of Windows.

  7. 86Box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/86Box

    86Box is an IBM PC emulator for Windows, Linux and Mac based on PCem that specializes in running old operating systems and software that are designed for IBM PC compatibles. . Originally forked from PCem, it later added support for other IBM PC compatible computers as we

  8. Emulation on the Amiga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emulation_on_the_Amiga

    The user needed to own the real Macintosh or Mac ROMs to legally run the emulator. In 1988 the first Apple Mac emulator, A-Max, was released as an external device for any Amiga. It needed Mac ROMs to function, and could read Mac disks when used with a Mac floppy drive (Amiga floppy drives are unable to read Mac disks. Unlike Amiga disks Mac ...

  9. Bochs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bochs

    Bochs (pronounced "box") is a portable IA-32 and x86-64 IBM PC compatible emulator and debugger mostly written in C++ and distributed as free software under the GNU Lesser General Public License. It supports emulation of the processor(s) (including protected mode ), memory, disks, display, Ethernet , BIOS and common hardware peripherals of PCs .