▲ | privatelypublic 3 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
Define "486-compatible." As far as I know even intel's newest cpus can run 486 era 16-bit stuff in hardware. But, a plain answer: Via Eden boards. still use north/southbridge architecture, and are from the mid 2000's. It's just modern Windows/Linux that have discontinued the ability. Or, perhaps you have 16/32 and 32/64 and are unable to do 16bit on 64bit machines- which still boils down to "operating system." By far the biggest issue though is that even the Via Eden processor is significantly faster than a 486- and lots of software (especially games) from that era used no-op instruction loops for timing and timers. This results in games like The Incredible Machine's level timer running out in half a second or less. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | p_ing 3 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
In Windows, once you're in long mode, there's no 16-bit available to you. You can instead take the DOSBox or other VM route. Linux isn't really relevant given the time frame. | |||||||||||||||||
|