Skip to main content

Questions tagged [software-development]

For questions about the software development process on retrocomputing platforms

4 votes
2 answers
363 views

Installers for DOS applications, particularly ones which interface with particular hardware or provide networking services, often have to add lines to CONFIG.SYS and/or AUTOEXEC.BAT. Obviously there's ...
Sneftel's user avatar
  • 353
-1 votes
1 answer
271 views

I'd like some help creating a retro DNS server, and I have a few questions: How do I get the pages in the wayback and put them in my DNS? How do I point the server to mount these pages? I would like ...
Marmelucos's user avatar
8 votes
1 answer
764 views

(I originally asked this in the "gaming"/Arqade section. However, it was suggested by a commenter that I should instead migrate it here. Since I don't know how one "migrates" a ...
user296681's user avatar
17 votes
2 answers
3k views

The Atari 2600, along with others like the Odyssey 2 or Intellivision, were among the first programmable home game consoles. They existed alongside personal computers like the Apple II and Commodore ...
David's user avatar
  • 5,317
5 votes
1 answer
363 views

Does anyone know why there is a SunOS kernel configuration file in the 4.1c.1 BSD directory tree in the CSRG ISOs? How to see that this file exists: McKusick sells the CSRG ISOs. But let's face it, ...
Knickers Brown's user avatar
5 votes
5 answers
1k views

I found out today that a large project like Microsoft Windows 1.0 took 80 man-years to develop. And this one was written in x86 assembly language. Is there a form or rule of thumb that states how much ...
Coder's user avatar
  • 1,282
21 votes
7 answers
5k views

One thing that struck me about the design of COBOL was that it was surprisingly complex, particularly for the era. As in, if I were trying to squeeze a compiler into a few tens of kilobytes of memory, ...
rwallace's user avatar
  • 65.3k
10 votes
1 answer
637 views

On i386 and beyond (assuming MS-DOS as the target OS and IBM PC as the target platform), my impression is game developers most typically used Watcom C / DJGPP plus one of the DOS extenders (DOS4GW, ...
DmytroL's user avatar
  • 2,794
15 votes
1 answer
972 views

As mentioned here the book Expert C Programming contains the claim that there was a bug in SunOS 4.0.3's version of lpr, (a printing program) caused by a custom mktemp function overriding the library ...
Ryan1729's user avatar
  • 535
41 votes
12 answers
9k views

In nearly all the assembly source files and published listings I read up to the early 1980s, the labels, mnemonics, and operands were written in all uppercase. Just a few years later, I noticed 80x86 ...
Paolo Amoroso's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
245 views

Upon beating the Namco arcade game Splatterhouse, released in November 1988, the following is shown in the credits along with the expected programmers and artists: SPECIAL MAKEUP DESIGNED ...
GGMG-he-him's user avatar
10 votes
4 answers
2k views

Gerald Weinberger, in the 1971 book The Psychology of Computer Programming, gives the following anecdote: The numerous stages [of reporting?] can produce interesting effects, as a result of filtering ...
Kaz's user avatar
  • 1,756
5 votes
2 answers
647 views

What de-compilers were available for ResEdit? A friend used a de-compiler to break the copy protection on F/A-18 Hornet and I remember having one to examine how programs worked. To clarify by de-...
Michael Shopsin's user avatar
18 votes
3 answers
863 views

Probably the most widespread software version numbering scheme in use today takes the form of a dotted sequence of integers. Variants of this scheme usually share the following characteristics: ...
user3840170's user avatar
  • 27.6k
11 votes
5 answers
1k views

Old computer systems were supplied—by our present notion—with very little memory, thus conservation of both RAM and storage room has been tremendously important during those years of austerity. ...
Incnis Mrsi's user avatar

15 30 50 per page
1
2 3 4 5