Run Windows 2000 on a DEC Alpha with a new es40 fork
53 points - today at 1:47 PM
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bartvk today at 5:05 PM
Somehow, Windows 2000 does not look dated to me. It looks functional and usable, and maybe even somewhat fresh. I never actually used it long-term (during college, started using Linux), so it can't be nostalgic. Anyone else feel the same?
andrewjf today at 4:39 PM
This is pretty cool, it brings back memories. Thanks for posting.
I used to manage Tru64 (Alpha) and OpenVMS (VAX and Alpha). Mostly Oracle DB and whatever they called their App development suite (horrible, horrible software) for a University's ERP system (called Banner) and infrastructure (Multinet on OpenVMS/VAX for DNS, DHCP, mail, etc). After that I moved on to AIX on Power5 for Oracle on HACMP and Veritas Cluster. Such a different world from what we have now.
I have an old AlphaServer ES47 running OpenVMS and Power5 560Q running AIX in my garage
orra today at 5:52 PM
This is really cool! There have been many DEC Alpha emulators over the years, but none have been capable of running Windows NT.
allenrb today at 3:42 PM
Emulating Alpha on x86_64 is definitely not a thing the Alpha designers foresaw. :-)
baron3dl today at 3:44 PM
did anyone ever run W2k on an ES40 in production?
the only dec hardware I ever touched that ran windows was an AlphaServer 1000, and my assignment was to get it back to running VMS. though, I'll admit now, i goldbricked a bit and spent some time trying out Digital UNIX first.
hsbauauvhabzb today at 5:14 PM
From Google, DEC Alpha is a RISC architecture, but I canβt see what es40 is, unless itβs just a fork code name?
_blk today at 4:26 PM
OK, I imagine that involved quite some challenges. Well done. But why? I fail to see a purpose. Is it just a DOOM runs on my smart toaster kind of thing or something that has production value?