From: notsaying@nospicedham.127.0.0.1   
      
   On Sat, 23 Jan 2021 07:24:16 GMT, paul   
    wrote:   
      
   > Rod Pemberton wrote:   
   >   
   >> This is a return to the 8-bit microprocessors of the 1980's.   
   >   
   > Yes. (IMHO)   
   >   
   > All I'm asking for is a working noob tutorial, with an assembler, on   
   > the most common desktop platform on the planet.   
   >   
   []   
   >   
   > All I want is a working noob tutorial with a working freeware   
   > assembler (on the most common home desktop computing platform on the   
   > planet).   
      
   I don't think you can have it; all existing asm tutorials are historic   
   and will, generally, use DOS on an IBM PC in real mode. No 64 bit   
   (probably not 32bit), no Windows (especially 7/10).   
      
   If you truly want to do this (rather than repeatedly ask for the   
   unavailable) then you'll have to install a DOS emulator, install the   
   tutorial of choice, learn x86 asm, move up to 32 bit then do some windows   
   calls, look at 64 bit, and *then* you can put together asm code for   
   Windows 10.   
      
   I think this has been said before, so I'll stop now.   
      
   --   
   Bah, and indeed, Humbug.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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