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On 11 Jun 99, at 12:06, Brent Reynolds wrote:
> .... In there, you will find about a dozen or more keyboard buffer
> utilities, often known as "buffer stuffers," or buffer extenders. They
> generally run as TSR utilities, and some of them allow the possibility for
> stuffing hundreds of keystrokes into the keyboard buffer, whereas DOS
> generally allows no more than 15 keystrokes at a time in the buffer.
Probably nobody really cares that it's the BIOS, and not DOS, that provides
15 (or 16) keystrokes worth of buffer. Just a nit.
But you should perhaps be aware that anything that extends this size needs
to find somewhere else in memory to do it -- which breaks anything that "knows
about" the BIOS's behaviour. So you almost certainly cannot run more than
one of these utilities at a time (okay, that's probably not a serious
problem); you may also find that they conflict with some other TSRs that use
"hot keys" or otherwise interact with the keyboard interrupts, and any
utilities that work by inserting "faked" keystrokes into the buffer.
[i.e. There's no general solution that can be guaranteed to work for
everyone. Any of these utilities might or might not work with the other
software you use.]
David G
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