Post by Steven LevineUnlikely. It's also unlikely you will be able to use HIGHMEM.EXE when
you do download it. You tend to avoid keeping your systems current,
so it's unlikely you have the prerequisite kernel installed.
When it comes to OS/2, the whole concept of a "current" system seems
a little strange, considering how long ago support ended for the
operating system. My desktop runs Warp 4.52 with the last fixpack
issued by IBM, so it is as "current" as real OS/2 is going to get as
far as the operating system is concerned. Sure, there are lots of
applications out there that require add-ons, and I won't have those
if I don't use those applications, but if you want to consider
applications in the context of "currentness", then nobody has a
"current" system because they don't have applications that I do have.
One such application is a WAV file editor, which makes use of high
memory; I recently edited a recording that allocated over 1.3 GB of
memory. Whether that is the same high memory capability kernel that
allows Firefox to load XUL.DLL into high memory, I don't know.
I also have a laptop running eCS 2.0, and I've tested the eCS 2.2 beta
on an even newer laptop that normally runs Windows 7. I even reported
the issues that I noticed during that test, but that was years ago, and
I have little confidence that eCS 2.2 will ever see the light of day.
But yes, I am reluctant to upgrade simply for the sake of trying to be
"current", because I've run into too many cases of "upgrades" breaking
existing applications. I even have an older 64-bit laptop still running
32-bit Windows XP, simply because when support ended, I ran a tool that
Microsoft provided to test my existing applications for compatibility
with Windows 7. There were a whole bunch that were listed as "not
compatible". As a result, that particular system isn't "current", nor
do I intend to make it "current". And I wish Microsoft would stop
nagging about the lack of support for XP. If there are still security
holes, it's their own fault; they had over a decade to find and fix all
the security holes in XP. Which makes you question their ability to
make more recent versions of Windows any more secure.
So, my strategy has been to stay with what works. When it no longer
works, then I'll do what is necessary to try and make it work. Such
is the case with Firefox. I use web sites that are now incompatible
with Firefox 10, so I'm giving Firefox 24 a try. It would be nice if
updates to Firefox for OS/2 were as easy as they are for Windows.