Subj : Time Slicing...
To   : Robert Wolfe
From : mark lewis
Date : Mon Mar 07 2016 05:07 pm


On Sun, 06 Mar 2016, Robert Wolfe wrote to All:

RW> I noticed that some DOS programs (namely BBS ones) tend to spike
RW> out the CPU under OS/2 and eCS.  I have TAME installed and it
RW> seems to help, but I was wondering two things here:

RW> 1.  Is there an alternative (preferable non-shareware) to TAME?

which TAME program is that? the old DOS tame.exe written by david thomas??

RW> 2. If not, is the TAME developer still reachable and is he still
RW> taking registrations for the software?

it is highly doubtful that they are still around much less taking
registrations...

me? i prefer and have always used the free OSTSR (OS/2 Time Slice Releaser)
from Jay Clegg... it converts DESQview DV-PAUSE calls to DOSSLEEP calls...
effectively it fools DESQview aware programs into thinking they are running
under DESQview... then i just set all programs to DV mode unless they
autodetect or recognize OS/2 on their own...

the OSTSR docs mention other programs like OS2SPEED and TAME21... i assume that
TAME21 is different than the DOS TAME i ask about above because the one version
of TAME that i've ever used is v3.2 dated Dec 1993 with a copyright from 1988
to 1994... apparently one could use OS2SPEED with TAME21... OSTSR apparently
does the same as those two combined but in a smaller package... i don't know as
i've never looked elsewhere... if something wasn't DV or OS/2 aware and gave up
time slices on its own, i didn't bother with it...

back in the day when i worried about such things, my own programs initialized
with code to determine which OS they were being run under and then they
selected one of five time slicing routines... after that, it was up to my code
to call the slices when desired/needed... finding a happy medium between 100%
CPU with 2 second processing OR 0% CPU with 30 minute processing could be a
real chore...

)\/(ark


* Origin:  (1:3634/12)