No more Quest for me :(

Cryophile
30 Jun 2004, 18:27
I'm running linux now, so I can't use Quest anymore. I can't dualboot since the ircd I'm running for Halca Network (irc.halca.org) requires me online 24/7 with no reboots.

Is there any chance you could make a linux port of Quest, Alex? I would rather not switch to Inform... if I can't use Quest, I'll just write my MUD in C++.

Alex
30 Jun 2004, 20:43
Unfortunately it's not possible, as Quest is written in VB and there's no easy way to port that to Linux. You could try using Wine though - although I've not been able to get Quest to work (I got as far as the splash screen...)

GameBoy
05 Jul 2004, 07:58
that means you won't be able to play Medieval Magic either :O

Farvardin
06 Jul 2004, 11:44
You can install Quest by using Wine. But you must have windows installed on your machine, and you really must *install* it *from* wine, and it should work. It works for me. I don't know about QDK, but the player is ok, you can write your game with any text editor.
Someone is porting Quest to linux, he told me he has already done half of the parser. He will probably post here when it will be complete.
I think it would be great if Alex could release the source code of the parser so more people would get interested in Quest.
[/b]

Cryophile
11 Jul 2004, 20:23
I can't install windows on my machine. It runs an irc server (shadow.halca.org) so I can't shut it down. A reboot may be ok, I've usually only got 50-65 users on the server at any given time... it's not that large a network. I definately can't shut it down while I install windows though. Or reboot into windows.

Anonymous
11 Jul 2004, 22:13
ok, so it's a pity then. Maybe it's possible to make it run Quest through a virtual emulator such as Bochs or Plex, but I haven't tried it yet. I noticed also in the latest version of Wine for Debian, Quest was no longer working, and now I've upgraded I can no longer come back to the old version.

Farvardin
16 Jul 2004, 22:57
to prove Quest really can run from Linux, here is a screenshot :

http://anamnese.online.fr/if/quest_and_wine.png

Note the text editor Kate can "fold" some parts of the code. It's very conveniant !

(I haven't used my game for the example, because I wish it may participate to the ifcomp next year, so I think it must remain "secret")

About installing Quest on Wine without Windows, maybe you could import into Wine those dll : (system folder)


StdOle2.tlb
MSVBVM50.dll
OleAut32.dll
OlePro32.dll
AsycFilt.dll
ComCat.dll
RichEd32.dll
comct232.ocx
comctl32.ocx
comdlg32.ocx
mci32.ocx
richtx32.ocx
CSWSK32.OCX
UUCODE32.DLL
NPMOD32.DLL
VBUZIP10.DLL

GameBoy
17 Jul 2004, 12:54
linux looks horrible

davidw
17 Jul 2004, 14:46
I agree. It looks like a cheap version of Windows 3.1.

Cryophile
09 Sept 2004, 20:00
My linux looks a thousand times better. It looks more like winXP. I run Slackware 10.0. Come to irc.halca.org sometime. I'm either S1aY3R or Drakyth and I'm op in almost every channel. We've got about 90 users right now, maybe another 50 more soon. By December we'll have 100 more.

Farvardin
09 Sept 2004, 22:30
My linux looks a thousand times better. It looks more like winXP


having a desktop looking like an operative system I hate is not really my goal. Btw I cannot run easily KDE (with the "plastik" theme, the one close to winxp) because my main computer is not very fast.
A clean and efficient desktop is enough for me.

Did you manage to run a windows emulator on your linux box ?


Cryophile
13 Sept 2004, 17:39
Ah, I didn't mean it looked exactly like it. I'm using a customized theme for KDE 3.2 I think. I just meant it looked better.

paul_one
18 Sept 2004, 07:56
Ha... I reverted XP back to 98-mode :P .... with a couple of changes here and there! I wish Linux wasn't so graphically hungry (like XP is now)... And I also wish ATi would get off their stinking butts and make some good bloody drivers >.< .

Farvardin
18 Sept 2004, 13:55

I wish Linux wasn't so graphically hungry



linux is not graphically hungry, linux is not a window manager.
You can use for desktop / window manager applications like gnome or kde which are quite hungry, but some others like xfce, windowmaker, fluxbox etc. are not heavy at all for your system.
And if you recompile your kernel, you'll have a much faster system than with windows

007bond
20 Sept 2004, 22:03
Slayer, just wondering: what happens if your computer freezes? Then you'd more than likely have to reboot.

Why don't you get a new computer?

Cryophile
21 Sept 2004, 15:28
My computer never freezes. At worst X may crash and send me back to bash. My ircd will still run.

I don't have a job yet and can't buy a new computer. When I do I will probably save $2500 or $3000 and buy something with around 2gb of RAM, dual AMD64 processors, and a 300gb HDD. Everything else would be the best I can afford.

davidw
21 Sept 2004, 17:35
I wouldn't get 2 GB of RAM. From what I've heard, it actually runs slower than 1 GB. Strange but true.

007bond
21 Sept 2004, 20:40
Well, I guess it's happy waiting for you.

Farvardin
22 Sept 2004, 07:27

From what I've heard, it actually runs slower than 1 GB



probably not on *nix systems.

http://www.anetforums.com/posts.aspx?ThreadIndex=7754

007bond
22 Sept 2004, 07:30
read the article. wtf is a mobo?

davidw
22 Sept 2004, 07:53
MOtherBOard.

007bond
22 Sept 2004, 08:53
Thanks. I'll store that with the rest of useless things I know.

paul_one
29 Sept 2004, 06:00
Farvadin:
Ahhh, I've never messed about with linux that much, and haven't actually done anything with the kernel at all... Means I have to go into the bash screen which, although not very graphically different to DOS, does hide about 90% of it's commands. Meaning it's very hard for me to actually DO anything.

That and the fact my past linux installs have never been able to get online.
I wonder if Linux can use my wireless cards :? .

Farvardin
29 Sept 2004, 17:40

bash screen which, although not very graphically different to DOS,



but much much more powerfull and conveniant, and it has colours too !

does hide about 90% of it's commands


type [tab] [tab] and you'll get all the commands available on the system.
type : "man command" and you'll get the manual on that command

http://www.ss64.com/bash/

At the beginning it may look boring and difficult, but after a short learning time it's becomes efficient.

I wonder if Linux can use my wireless cards



probably...
You can try the knoppix live cd. I've seen it has support for such wireless cards.

Cryophile
29 Sept 2004, 19:08
It *might* run the wireless hardware. They're adding wireless support into the kernel atm :(