aarondong2005 Posted May 11, 2020 Report Posted May 11, 2020 Well, it is bit pain since the Motorola M1225 4.0 CPS can only running under Windows XP. Under the Windows 10 Pro 64bit it is can not even installed. So first I used a old machine installed the Windows XP and software. It is good, but since I have limited space I don't want having extra monitor and case in my office. Today I installed the Oracle VM VirtualBox and installed the Windows XP on it. Then loaded the software. Also install the driver for the FTDI driver for the XP. Finally I can use it to program my M1225 under Windows 10 Pro 64bit now. Quote
kidphc Posted May 11, 2020 Report Posted May 11, 2020 Did you try setting the backward compatibility in Windows 10? Right click icon.PropertiesCompatibility tab"run this porgram in compatibility mod for""windows 7" or "windows Vista sp2" Doesn't always work but can work wonders for some software Quote
Lscott Posted May 11, 2020 Report Posted May 11, 2020 Did you try setting the backward compatibility in Windows 10? I'm not sure about the software he has but I've run across some that still use 16 bit installers. Those don't work on Win 10 at all. Setting the compatibility mode is useless. The solution he used is a good one, running Win XP in a VM. https://www.virtualbox.org You can get a Win XP VM in Win 10 but you have to pay for the much more expensive Pro version to get the VM subsystem, "Hyper-V". https://www.download3k.com/articles/How-to-add-an-XP-Mode-Virtual-Machine-to-Windows-10-or-8-using-Hyper-V-00770 VirtualBox does about the same thing for zero cost. However you're left with finding a copy of the Win XP on your own. Virtual Box is a good opensource VM package. I've even run Windows 3.1 in it. Even managed to find a copy of IBM's OS2 Warp 4 and got that to install and run too. If IBM and Microsoft had their act together we would all be running OS2 instead of Windows. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OS/2 Remember "Windows is a pane in the glass". Quote
kidphc Posted May 11, 2020 Report Posted May 11, 2020 I'm not sure about the software he has but I've run across some that still use 16 bit installers. Those don't work on Win 10 at all. Setting the compatibility mode is useless. The solution he used is a good one, running Win XP in a VM. https://www.virtualbox.org You can get a Win XP VM in Win 10 but you have to pay for the much more expensive Pro version to get the VM subsystem, "Hyper-V". https://www.download3k.com/articles/How-to-add-an-XP-Mode-Virtual-Machine-to-Windows-10-or-8-using-Hyper-V-00770 VirtualBox does about the same thing for zero cost. However you're left with finding a copy of the Win XP on your own. Virtual Box is a good opensource VM package. I've even run Windows 3.1 in it. Even managed to find a copy of IBM's OS2 Warp 4 and got that to install and run too. If IBM and Microsoft had their act together we would all be running OS2 instead of Windows. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OS/2 Remember "Windows is a pane in the glass".Good to know. I still have a valid VWare from my days at EMC. Quote
Lscott Posted May 11, 2020 Report Posted May 11, 2020 Good to know. I still have a valid VWare from my days at EMC. I hope at some point these guys will get to the beta phase of development then it might be stable enough to do something with it. I've been watching this project for a while. It's an open source clone of MS Windows. https://reactos.org Quote
aarondong2005 Posted May 11, 2020 Author Report Posted May 11, 2020 Did you try setting the backward compatibility in Windows 10? Right click icon.PropertiesCompatibility tab"run this porgram in compatibility mod for""windows 7" or "windows Vista sp2" Doesn't always work but can work wonders for some softwareIt doesn't work. I already tried. So I went to the VM. kidphc 1 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.