An anonymous reader quotes a report from BetaNews. Slack developer Felix Rieseberg released Windows 95 as an Electron app four years ago and updated it shortly thereafter to run classic games like Doom. Now he’s rolling out a new version that can run on his Windows, Mac, or Linux system. Reeseberg’s Windows 95 is written entirely in JavaScript based on the Electron framework, so it doesn’t run as smoothly as native apps do, but it shouldn’t be daunting. not.
This is the second update this year, reaching version 3.1.1 and containing two important changes.
– Upgrade from Electron v18 to Electron v21 (and Chrome and Node.js)
– Upgraded v86 (sound is back!)
The previous update (June) brought the software to 3.0.0 and introduced the following changes:
– Electron v18 upgraded from Electron v11 (and thus Chrome and Node.js)
– Upgraded v86 (currently using WASM)
– Upgrade various small dependencies
– Better scaling on all platforms
– On Windows the link to OSFMount was broken, now fixed.
– Windows now has a cleaner installation animation.
– Windows, windows95[プログラムと機能]Appropriate icons appear in the menu. The latest versions of Windows 95 apps for Windows, macOS, and Linux can be downloaded from their respective links.