My preferred working environment boots directly into Win98's MS-DOS, and I run Windows when I want to by typing WIN98 (I've renamed WIN.COM WIN98.COM). When I exit from Windows ("Shutdown"), I return to the MS-DOS prompt, just like in the old days of Win31.
The reason I work this way is partly because I've been a DOS programmer for about 25 years, and know/like the DOS environment, and have over 200 home-written utilities doing everything from searching, listing, benchmarking, etc., to tracing DOS calls, interrupts, whatever; but it's also because working from DOS gives me total control over my Windows environment.
I can - and regularly do - ZIP my entire Windows setup, including system files, applications and the registry, and write this onto a CD. Currently, I can get two setups on a standard CD - despite using many major applications. On another (bootable) CD, I store all my source files and personal data files at least once a week as permanent backup.
If I want to completely refresh my machine, I can even FDISK (re-partition) the entire drive, install "C:" from a bootable backup, and then D: (where Windows 98 and the apps live) from the Windows CD, before recovering anything else on other partitions from whatever sources are appropriate.
So I'm completely in control of my working environment, can reinstall it in minutes from a pair of CDs, and don't need to use the "Access IBM" button to dig my way out of a problem.
Am I the only person doing something like this? If so, I count myself lucky (if nerdy!
Brian






