Win2K and NT 4 at work, Win98 at home.
Mac OS 9 at home, NT/Unix at work.
2.2.14. You know I mean 2.2.14 Although I did run the 2.1.x series a while ago because I wanted some of the developmental drivers… I haven’t messed with the code, though, if only because it’d screw up official patches and downloading the whole thing again over a modem isn’t fun…
``You’re just an empty cage girl if you kill the bird.’’ – Tori Amos.
Wow, I thought I would have everyone beat. Enigmaone takes the prize, though.
I’ve got pretty much everything he’s got – but I’ve also got Macs at work running OS 7.5.5, 8.1, 8.5, and 9 – and I’m working on getting a copy of Linux PPC running.
actually I wasn’t being a smart ass. I know 2 people who purposely use the x.1.x kernels for bughunts and to experiment.
I was getting ready to bow to your superiority, because there’s no way I’d do it. I’m not that smart.
Just picked up an sale-priced copy of VirtualPC with Red Hat Linux. Haven’t used it for much yet, but does browsing to this site using Netscape for Linux count?
So anyway, I just counted and came to a pretty impressive conclusion if I’m allowed to count all the OS’s I have installed on my laptop, and which will boot and in which I can do complicated things like delete or rename a file –
Macintosh System 1.1
Macintosh System 2.0
Macintosh System 3.0
Macintosh System 4.0
Macintosh System 4.1
Macintosh System 6.0.8
Macintosh System 7.1
Macintosh System 7.5
MacOS 8.1
MacOS 8.6
Mac OS X Server 1.0
MS Windows 95
MS Windows NT Server 4.0 Sv Pk 1
Red Hat Linux v.?? (OK, I don’t know…
AmigaOS Workbench 40.42
That’s 15 operating systems. (I can’t count the Palm Pilot emulator until I get it to run)
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