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Microsoft launched Windows 3.1 on April 6, 1992. What made it so innovative 25 years ago? Let's take a stroll down memory lane in this slideshow.
With iDOS and Windows 3.1, you can turn your iPad into a portable classic gaming machine. Benj has shown off several classic Windows titles running on his iPad, including games like Civilization II.
Don't want Windows 10? No problem, upgrade to Windows 3.1 instead Meet the Microsoft operating system that ushered in much of what we experience in desktop computing today.
Windows 3.1 is now 30 years old. The operating system launched back on April 6, 1992, and introduced several features that have since become ubiquitous.
Relive your youth by building a Pi-powered Windows 98 smartwatch or just by booting up classic 90's operating systems on your Pi.
Developer Ruben Retro made a clone of Windows 3.1 that is playable on the Game Boy Color. GBS WINDOWS for Game Boy is not a port of Windows 3.1, or any version of Windows for that matter.
An anonymous developer has created a WinGPT app for the Windows 3.1 operating system. It brings a ChatGPT interface to ancient 16-bit PCs.
Posted in classic hacks, computer hacks Tagged bios, coreboot, eeprom, firmware, libreboot, thinkpad, windows 3.1 ← Interactive Demo Shows The Power Of Fourier Transforms ...
Windows 3.1 can now be installed on your iPad, thanks to an MS-DOS emulator named iDOS 2 available in the App Store. Here is how you can install Windows 3.1 on your iPad.
WireGuard for Windows 0.3.1 is the release you’ve been waiting for Unprivileged users can start and stop WireGuard tunnels via the UI now.
Out of love for the software of yesteryear, [Greg Kennedy] has put together a bot that posts Windows 3.1 screensavers on Twitter. A Perl script runs the show in this case.
A Paris airport was forced to shut down earlier this month after a computer running Windows 3.1, a prehistoric operating system from 23 years ago, crashed in bad weather. Planes were grounded on ...