Find a flaw

Find a flaw.

'MS'

It's clearly made for SJWs and feminists as it's called "MS dos"

Using \ for directories instead of /.

No thanks.

Shit graphics. Both low colour support and low resolution. Gimped console (no interpretted basic). No support for multi processes or threads. That's just off the top of my head.

>Case insensitive
eww

I real feel old, I mostly use Dos for playing games and writing some short stories until they had released Win 95.

>MS

Have you tried using a CD-ROM driver on MS-DOS? I attempted that a year ago. Took me an hour and didn't even work in the end.

Ring 0

>Format my Macbook Pro
>Installing macOS again
>Have to choose insensitive or sensitive
>Pick sensitive
>Can't install Adobe programs like Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere etc

>case insensitive userland, while case sensitive under the hood
>\
>reserved filenames
>inferior programming capabilities compared to it's rivals

"Not enough extended memory"

literally this.

What the actual h*ck were they thinking on this?

it's barely an operating system

it's one of its strengths and one of its flaws at the same time

>it's
>it is rivals

Noob

>*blocks your path*

Wipe hdd & restore from cold backup.

It's not CP/M

before directories and paths were supported command line arguments were done with /, like cmd /?
so, to make programs not confuse paths with arguments they decided to use \ for paths.

I think it's a legacy thing, / were reserved for command switches so they chose \ instead

im sure this system wasn't even created by microsoft
they took the os from someone else and re-licenced it

Non-portable proprietary software.

Early versions of DOS (as well as CP/M which it was based on) were designed to be used only with floppy disks, which weren't really big enough to justify the use of subdirectories. So for some reason they decided to use the slash to indicate command-line switches, which meant when directories were added later on they had to find a different symbol. Not sure why they didn't just go with the established Unix convention in the first place though.

I prefere FreeDos.

"it's" can be possessive and a contraction.

LOL, go back to your C128.

I prefere Unix.

MS wanted / for directory and - for switch but IBM vetoed it. Thanks IBM.

fpbp

manually setting irqs

git gud m8

Int13h

> (OP)
>im sure this system wasn't even created by microsoft
>they took the os from someone else and re-licenced it
PC-DOS

No, the genitive case is “its”, without the apostrophe.

A 16b real-mode OS is not so much an OS as a standard library for file access and a text based directory navigation shell.

And gate A20

It's slowly dying though, because people either are not educated enough to know this quirk, or just don't care. Similarly, the usage of the hyphen is dying out as we speak, and not only in English, but in may other languages too (reasons being similar, ignorance and carelessness being the primary ones).

>may
*many

>a standard library for file access and a text based directory navigation shell

Oughtta be enuff for anybody

really no reason to use DOS when you can use Windows 3.1

>Windows 3.1
bloat

>Took me an hour and didn't even work in the end.

Pathetic.

can't watch porn

Use your imagination, it's better