He is the life of parties he has never attended.
If he were to punch you in the face, you'd have to fight off the urge to thank him.
Sharks have a week dedicated to him.
Kate upton
The first commercial version of DOS was released to the public in 1981
Jai lai http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jai_alai
The guy in the Dos Equis commercial is an actor named Jonathan Goldsmith. He played the role of "The Most Interesting Man in the World" in the ad campaign.
Nowadays, the commercial use of DOS is virtually unexistant, limited to banks and government agencies (some of their hardware and software are decades old, because there was no need to replace any of it). But there are still enthusiasts who use that operating system and develop it further. With *nix systems, DOS doesn't have a chance for a rebirth and will eventually become a dead OS completely.
MS-DOS supports multiprogramming to some extent.-
The Disk Operating System that became MS-DOS is claimed to have come from work done by Digital Research. What money changed hands when Microsoft bought DOS would normally be 'commercial in confidence' or do not ask.
MS-DOS 6.22 was the last stand-alone version of MS-DOS. Some believed that MS-DOS 7.0 was the last version of MS-DOS since Windows 95 reported MS-DOS as MS-DOS 7.0. However, this was just a shell in Windows and not a stand-alone version of MS-DOS.
Now a days, no any site is running on DOS.
DOS by default is not capable of multi-tasking. However, there are some shell and TSRs designed to allow you to switch between different DOS apps.
It supports some dos commands. Use start->run->cmd to check this out.
no they have some there