asingh
Aspiring Novelist
Okay..though OFF topic...here is a way to id 16-BIT applications...
Right-click the program's executable file and then choose Properties. If you see a Version tab, it's a 32-bit program.
Or, if the program is running, press Ctrl+Shift+Esc to open the Windows Task Manager. On the Processes tab, look in the Image Name column for the name of the program's executable file. If any 16-bit programs are running, you'll find an entry for Ntvdm.exe, the virtual DOS machine. Just above it in the list, you'll see indented entries for Wowexec.exe (the Windows on Windows subsystem) and the executable name of each 16-bit program running in that virtual machine.
I guess...then I will migrate to 64-BIT. 4GB ----> Yummy...! )
Right-click the program's executable file and then choose Properties. If you see a Version tab, it's a 32-bit program.
Or, if the program is running, press Ctrl+Shift+Esc to open the Windows Task Manager. On the Processes tab, look in the Image Name column for the name of the program's executable file. If any 16-bit programs are running, you'll find an entry for Ntvdm.exe, the virtual DOS machine. Just above it in the list, you'll see indented entries for Wowexec.exe (the Windows on Windows subsystem) and the executable name of each 16-bit program running in that virtual machine.
I guess...then I will migrate to 64-BIT. 4GB ----> Yummy...! )