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A question about Windows and DOS

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renluop:
Rap me on the knuckle or where you will, guys, if this is in the wrong section!

My upgrade from 7 to 10 is so so, and there are more errors, some critical, in the event viewer. As the system is nearly 7  y.o. I am wondering if it might be time for a new system anyway. But that may be for later

My question: I noticed that PC World had systems marked either "Windows 10" or "Windows 10 DOS" Has DOS been made unnecessary in some cases now, but not in all, and why?

SSDs don't seem to add much to the price; are they worth it?

Dray:
Windows 10 DOS? I find that hard to believe. How are SSDs involved in this?

Weaver:
I don't know what Windows 10 DOS means. Recent versions of Windows include a DOS PC virtual machine emulator in them that emulates 1980s PC hardware to some extent, and includes a special version of DOS and command.com. This is only invoked when you run actual DOS executables, such as command.com, which are pretty rare these days.

 The Windows NT command line - "CMD" - is largely compatible in syntax terms with the DOS batch language, but is a Native Windiws NT family process, no DOS at all.

Ronski:

--- Quote from: renluop on April 30, 2016, 08:11:08 PM ---SSDs don't seem to add much to the price; are they worth it?

--- End quote ---

SSD's make a big difference and are well worth it, just make sure it's at least 120GB, in fact I'd say 180GB minimum. I've converted all our PCs to SSD here and at work  ;D

renluop:
Thanks!
After Dray's reply I went elsewhere, and found more or less what Weaver and Ronski said on my question ( actually two questions).

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