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#11
I'm still using ACDSee32 v2.41, have newer version but the old one does all that I need and I prefer it to the interface of IrfanView.
:)
I'm still using ACDSee32 v2.41, have newer version but the old one does all that I need and I prefer it to the interface of IrfanView.
:)
I just discovered something and therefore need to amend my last post. In that post I talked about what I had to do in order to install an old application. Well--a short while ago, I found out that it does not apply only to old applications. It also applies to some newer ones. I wanted to install MS Office 2007 on my guest machine. I put the CD in the drive and attempted to install it, but it wanted to install it on my host machine. I therefore copied the installation file to a folder on my guest machine and used that file to install. It then installed on my guest machine. I've installed some other applications in the normal way and it worked as it normally would. But on that old app and with MS Office it wouldn't. Has anyone else run into this?
I'm still using Microsnot Picture It! Photo 7.0. I was astounded to find it would work on Win7 64 bit.
That's great.
With Picture-It 99 the only thing I can't do is put text on a picture. If I try, Picture-It crashes. It happens with XP as well.
So- I just don't try to put text on a picture.
I run it making it compatible to XP SP3.
Some old DOS games :P They're able to work within Windows 7 due to a DOS emulator (:
I don't know if this would fall in this area(probably doesn't) but it is software but games lol oldest app i got in my pc is the old dos doom games like doom II and Quake II. Um oldest software I have I think is Microsoft office 2003 but the dos games are from 90's
Of course it counts, some of my old games date from the late 90s. That's why I have XP still installed and that's what I use it for now.