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could ZeldaOS fit on a floppy? #7
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thanks for filing the issue. |
@chillancezen Thank you too, for a kind reply. ZeldaOS looks really great to be honest, judging by the screenshots. I wish you good luck in your project! |
Thanks,
The image contains a custom bootloader, the host kernel and the guest image(which is a tetris game) so sorry that I cannot help. |
@chillancezen Well, running a Tetris game from a BIOS is already something wonderful that could be shown off to your friends 😉 |
Even today the floppies are still being used, for example - as virtual floppies inside the coreboot open source BIOS. Just imagine: your wonderful OS could be a part of someone's BIOS build! (for coreboot supported motherboard, maybe you have or could get one - see https://www.coreboot.org/Supported_Motherboards )
@chillancezen , If you already have a coreboot-supported motherboard, or a real chance to get one, - wouldn't it be cool to be able to launch your own OS straight from the BIOS chip? ;) With one simple command its possible to add any floppy to coreboot BIOS build - and then you see it as a boot entry! Multiple floppies could be added this way (as long as you have enough space left inside the BIOS flash chip, luckily LZMA compression could be used for the stored floppies to reduce their occupied size)
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