Geoworks Ensemble 2.01 Download
Geoworks Ensemble 2.01. Ensemble 2.01 was an incremental upgrade to Ensemble 2.0 which provided a new version of PCAO and some performance enhancements. A patch to upgrade Ensemble 2.0 to version 2.01 was distributed to Ensemble 2.0 customers for free by download or on disk for a nominal media and. After release of Ensemble 2.01, GeoWorks dropped support for the desktop version to focus on handhelds and smart devices.
This release was created for you, eager to use GeoWorks Ensemble 2.01 full and with without limitations. Our intentions are not to harm GeoWorks software company but to give the possibility to those who can not pay for any piece of software out there. This should be your intention too, as a user, to fully evaluate GeoWorks Ensemble 2.01 without restrictions and then decide. If you are keeping the software and want to use it longer than its trial time, we strongly encourage you purchasing the license key from GeoWorks official website. Our releases are to prove that we can!
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OSNews.com The Death of GEOS? By special contributor Michael Hill on 2010-10-07 14:59:40 This is a painful article to write. I've been a longtime fan and user of what is affectionately known as PC/GEOS over the years. However, I'm fearing we're nearing the end of GEOS. I have an original 'Working' version of the GeoWorks trial from Comdex many years ago, I purchased GeoWorks 1.0, 1.2 (the one with Borland Quattro Pro because the PC/GEOS native spreadsheet wasn't quite ready), GeoWorks Ensemble 2.0 and 2.1 (with the native spreadsheet), several versions of PC/GEOS from NewDeal and the latest version of PC/GEOS known as Breadbox Ensemble 4.1.3.0. Add to this donations from PC/GEOS fans, trips to surplus software stores and garage sales and I'd venture to bet I have one of the most complete PC/GEOS collections available. If the computer press made a difference then we'd all be using PC/GEOS today because in the early days of DOS and the first few versions of Windows the consensus was PC/GEOS (known commercially as GeoWorks) offered a 'better DOS than DOS and a better Windows than Windows'.
As an aside, note that the original GEOS (Graphical Environment Operating System) was originally written for the Apple II and Commodore 64/128 computers by Berkeley SoftWorks founded by Brian Doughtery which later became GeoWorks Corporation. These versions were met with both praise and criticism from the press, praise for the amazing functionality available within the extremely limited memory and processor speeds of the day and criticism because of the need to swap disks, the only practical way to offer a robust suite of WYSIWG tools on such limited platforms. The Apple version of GEOS (a.k.a. Apple GEOS) is from Breadbox Computer Company as a free, unsupported download, and the Commodore version of GEOS is from the Commodore copyright holder Click Here Software. But back to PC/GEOS. It has served as the underlying operating system/GUI (a unique distinction as PC/GEOS requires an underlying operating system to handle file input/output (some variation of DOS) for a number of hardware form factors including IBM computers intended for consumers (PS/1), Hewlett-Packard (OmniGo) and Casio hand-held computers, Brother GeoBook products, Nokia smart-phones and low-cost, educational and home based computers.
Despite this long legacy, I fear that PC/GEOS is close to death and I'm not the only one who thinks so. One of Yahoo's most overlooked resources is their 'Groups' functionality, think a more friendly version of IRC (internet relay chat) or Google Groups (Usenet). The most active group I've found following PC/GEOS is GEOS-Talk on Yahoo! Groups founded by Byron Collins, another long-time PC/GEOS fanatic.
Up until the last year, the last two years posts on GEOS-Talk were filled with comments, ideas, users sharing tips about getting PC/GEOS to run using DOSBox, DOSEmu on Linux systems, application hints, and most important, ideas for growing, expanding and suggestions for the current owners of PC/GEOS, Breadbox Computer Company for how they can expand, grow and profit from this admittedly old/archaic technology while bringing it into the modern computer age. Unfortunately the posts have all but dried up and more important, support has turned to criticism, bitterness, despair and (mostly half-hearted, unrealistic) offers to purchase the software from the existing copyright owners (Breadbox Computer Corporation). Another aside. Node Js Php Serialize Object more. PC/GEOS, or more importantly 'Ensemble' which are the productivity applications bundled with PC/GEOS are still impressive productivity applications that provide a lot of punch for the extremely limited system requirements needed for PC/GEOS. While they lack compatibility with the latest file formats, Ensemble applications can still compete with the likes of KOffice, Microsoft Works, Gnome Office and other office suites.