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From: Jason S on 23 Jul 2010 23:34 On 2010-07-23 15:20:52 -0400, Bobby Johnson said: > If you are running Windows 7 Professional 64-bit I would guess the > game/program is not compatible. In fact it sounds as though it will > not run on any NT system. You can download VMware Player version 3.1, > which is a FREE program, and install Win98 in a Virtual Machine. > > If it was published in 1995 it may have been compiled as an 8-bit > program for Win 3 and/or DOS. If it is 8-bit it will absolutely not > run on any NT based OS. > > > On 2010-07-23 11:53, Jason S wrote: >> On 2010-07-23 07:32:26 -0400, Bobby Johnson said: >> >>> And how is all this related to a 64-bit OS? >>> >>> This is a 64-bit OS group, not a 32-bit OS group. >>> >>> >>> On 2010-07-22 18:44, Jason S wrote: >>>> Hello all. I'm having some trouble with a game running on NT-based >>>> windows OS's. It keeps throwing a general protection fault from a DLL. >>>> Is there any way to solve this issue so the game will run on modern >>>> windows OS's? I can get the game to run on Windows 98SE. So far I've >>>> failed to get it to run on Windows XP Pro and Windows 7 Pro. I'm >>>> currently trying to get a copy of Windows 2000 and Windows ME so I can >>>> try it with those two systems. >>>> >>>> Compatibility mode failed. I can't figure out if there's a way to get it >>>> to work or if it can even work at all. If it helps, the game is Greg >>>> Norman Ultimate Challenge Golf (1995). >> >> Must have forgot to mention that Windows 7 is running on an x64 system. Definitely not 8-bit... It was pretty advanced at the time (3-D animation with real images and graphics... Probably 16-bit). I'm setting up a Windows 98 box that I'll use for now. Just going to experiment for now, maybe even use my Windows 3.1 floppies if I can find them :) -- Jason
From: Bob I on 26 Jul 2010 08:49 Jason S wrote: > On 2010-07-23 15:20:52 -0400, Bobby Johnson said: > >> If you are running Windows 7 Professional 64-bit I would guess the >> game/program is not compatible. In fact it sounds as though it will >> not run on any NT system. You can download VMware Player version 3.1, >> which is a FREE program, and install Win98 in a Virtual Machine. >> >> If it was published in 1995 it may have been compiled as an 8-bit >> program for Win 3 and/or DOS. If it is 8-bit it will absolutely not >> run on any NT based OS. >> >> >> On 2010-07-23 11:53, Jason S wrote: >> >>> On 2010-07-23 07:32:26 -0400, Bobby Johnson said: >>> >>>> And how is all this related to a 64-bit OS? >>>> >>>> This is a 64-bit OS group, not a 32-bit OS group. >>>> >>>> >>>> On 2010-07-22 18:44, Jason S wrote: >>>> >>>>> Hello all. I'm having some trouble with a game running on NT-based >>>>> windows OS's. It keeps throwing a general protection fault from a DLL. >>>>> Is there any way to solve this issue so the game will run on modern >>>>> windows OS's? I can get the game to run on Windows 98SE. So far I've >>>>> failed to get it to run on Windows XP Pro and Windows 7 Pro. I'm >>>>> currently trying to get a copy of Windows 2000 and Windows ME so I can >>>>> try it with those two systems. >>>>> >>>>> Compatibility mode failed. I can't figure out if there's a way to >>>>> get it >>>>> to work or if it can even work at all. If it helps, the game is Greg >>>>> Norman Ultimate Challenge Golf (1995). >>> >>> >>> Must have forgot to mention that Windows 7 is running on an x64 system. > > > Definitely not 8-bit... It was pretty advanced at the time (3-D > animation with real images and graphics... Probably 16-bit). I'm setting > up a Windows 98 box that I'll use for now. Just going to experiment for > now, maybe even use my Windows 3.1 floppies if I can find them :) Most likely in order to provide those "pretty advanced" images and graphics the software was manipulating the hardware directly. That is a no-no in NT. You may get it to work in a VM box, but you won't get some program like that to fly directly in NT.
From: Jason S on 26 Jul 2010 13:17 On 2010-07-26 08:49:23 -0400, Bob I said: > Jason S wrote: > >> On 2010-07-23 15:20:52 -0400, Bobby Johnson said: >> >>> If you are running Windows 7 Professional 64-bit I would guess the >>> game/program is not compatible. In fact it sounds as though it will >>> not run on any NT system. You can download VMware Player version 3.1, >>> which is a FREE program, and install Win98 in a Virtual Machine. >>> >>> If it was published in 1995 it may have been compiled as an 8-bit >>> program for Win 3 and/or DOS. If it is 8-bit it will absolutely not >>> run on any NT based OS. >>> >>> >>> On 2010-07-23 11:53, Jason S wrote: >>> >>>> On 2010-07-23 07:32:26 -0400, Bobby Johnson said: >>>> >>>>> And how is all this related to a 64-bit OS? >>>>> >>>>> This is a 64-bit OS group, not a 32-bit OS group. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> On 2010-07-22 18:44, Jason S wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> Hello all. I'm having some trouble with a game running on NT-based >>>>>> windows OS's. It keeps throwing a general protection fault from a DLL. >>>>>> Is there any way to solve this issue so the game will run on modern >>>>>> windows OS's? I can get the game to run on Windows 98SE. So far I've >>>>>> failed to get it to run on Windows XP Pro and Windows 7 Pro. I'm >>>>>> currently trying to get a copy of Windows 2000 and Windows ME so I can >>>>>> try it with those two systems. >>>>>> >>>>>> Compatibility mode failed. I can't figure out if there's a way to get it >>>>>> to work or if it can even work at all. If it helps, the game is Greg >>>>>> Norman Ultimate Challenge Golf (1995). >>>> >>>> >>>> Must have forgot to mention that Windows 7 is running on an x64 system. >> >> >> Definitely not 8-bit... It was pretty advanced at the time (3-D >> animation with real images and graphics... Probably 16-bit). I'm >> setting up a Windows 98 box that I'll use for now. Just going to >> experiment for now, maybe even use my Windows 3.1 floppies if I can >> find them :) > > Most likely in order to provide those "pretty advanced" images and > graphics the software was manipulating the hardware directly. That is a > no-no in NT. You may get it to work in a VM box, but you won't get some > program like that to fly directly in NT. It works in Parallels (virtual box for Mac) but has no sound because the sound drivers are dead. But I'll try it on Virtual PC box on Windows 7. -- Jason
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