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I consider myself fortunate that my first computer (a Gateway P90) came with an ESS card, not one of the usual Soundblasters. At that time it had a better set of midi sounds than any of the other mass market sound cards and they still sound very good and often better than current cards. It too has a very wide range of compatibilities including the usual Soundblaster emulation (which sounds better than a native Soundblaster) and a really nice Adlib emulation which really sounds quite musical. |
No windows 95c and b can handle fat32 and can handle drives and aprtitons over 2gb to a max of 8 I think
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FAT32 was introduced when Windows 95 OSR2 was released; I suspect that is what you mean by 95c. 95b only had FAT16 (ignoring diskette formats). |
I had b using a fat32 drive so the argument continues.
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MS's stated reason for restricting its availability in this way was that they didn't want the inevitable high support load and bad feeling that would result as those with insufficient knowledge and experience proceeded to screw up their file systems during the upgrade. I know all this because I tried and failed to get a legitimate copy of it myself. I still run 95b (or I did until I lost a critical sector on a disk) and have been stuck with FAT16 which is far from ideal. |
Come to think of it you arte right only new systems got 95b and osr2.0 since 95b was minior updates to a. My local dealer sold us our second computer running 95c he also secretly gave me a copy of 95c0sr 2.5 for buying a mouse so that I could update the old pc's old one I reformated and resinstalled one day when is was bored and but 95c on our old 486.
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Lucky rembers second pc's onboard sound.
Note I do not remember anything about the first pc exept it was a 486 50mhz or 66mhz mabey. Even there imy memory is flakey. |
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