steps through a set of screens, each one a recreation of a different failure
mode of an operating system. Systems depicted include
Windows 3.1, Windows 95, Windows NT, MS-DOS, AmigaDOS 1.3, Linux,
-SCO UNIX, BSD UNIX, HPUX, Solaris, VMS, HVX/GCOS6, IBM OS/390,
+SCO UNIX, BSD UNIX, HPUX, Solaris, Tru64, VMS, HVX/GCOS6, IBM OS/390, OS/2,
MacOS (MacsBug, Bomb, Sad Mac, and OSX), Atari ST, Apple ][+, and
NCD X Terminals.
.PP
.BR doBSD ,
.BR doLinux ,
.BR doSparcLinux ,
+.BR doHPPALinux ,
.BR doBlitDamage ,
.BR doSolaris ,
.BR doHPUX ,
.BR doApple2 ,
.BR doOS390 ,
+.BR doTru64 ,
.BR doVMS ,
.BR doMSDOS ,
+.BR doOS2 ,
and
.BR doHVX .
Each of these is a Boolean resource, they all default to true, except
-for doAtari, doBSD, and doSparcLinux, which are turned off by default,
-because they're really not all that interesting looking unless you're a
-fan of those systems.
+for doAtari, doBSD, doSparcLinux, and doHPPALinux, which are turned off
+by default, because they're really not all that interesting looking
+unless you're a fan of those systems.
There are command-line options for all of these:
e.g., \fI\-bsd\fP, \fI\-no-bsd\fP. (Also note the \fI\-only\fP option.)
registered trademark of Apple Computer. Amiga is a registered trademark of
Amiga International, Inc. Atari ST is probably a trademark, too, but it's
hard to tell who owns it. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds,
-but it isn't his fault.
+but it isn't his fault. OS/2 is a registered trademark of International
+Business Machines Corporation.
.SH COPYRIGHT
Copyright \(co 1998-2003 by Jamie Zawinski. Permission to use, copy, modify,
distribute, and sell this software and its documentation for any purpose is