Windows 3.1: Difference between revisions
mNo edit summary |
(Updated the descriptions, which were very outdated!) |
||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
|fnote= | |fnote= | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Windows 3.1-tan''' (3.1たん) | '''Windows 3.1-tan''' (3.1たん) was one of the less common Windows personifications but is now part of the OS-tan canon. The first appearances of Windows 3.1 have used a white mech-box similar to that used by 98 and 98SE, piloted by a girl who appears to be DOS/V. Another version that has became increasingly common and became part of the [[ List_of_Canon_OS-tans | OS-tan canon]] is that of a frail grey-haired young girl in a long frilly violet gown, with a 3.1 brooch on her collar. She has a quiet personality and is usually accompanied by either a black cat (sometimes nicknamed DOS Kitty) or a small black-haired catgirl in a nurse's outfit, both representing DOS. She is often seen with [[NT-tan | Windows NT-tan]] and [[95-tan | 95-tan]] but has an inseparable relationship with DOS Kitty as Windows 3.x is highly dependent on DOS especially compared to its successors which mainly used a stripped-down version of DOS for booting. | ||
See also: | |||
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_3.1x Wikipedia article on Windows 3.1] | |||
[[Category:Windows]] |
Revision as of 15:27, 16 February 2009
Windows 3.1-tan (3.1たん) was one of the less common Windows personifications but is now part of the OS-tan canon. The first appearances of Windows 3.1 have used a white mech-box similar to that used by 98 and 98SE, piloted by a girl who appears to be DOS/V. Another version that has became increasingly common and became part of the OS-tan canon is that of a frail grey-haired young girl in a long frilly violet gown, with a 3.1 brooch on her collar. She has a quiet personality and is usually accompanied by either a black cat (sometimes nicknamed DOS Kitty) or a small black-haired catgirl in a nurse's outfit, both representing DOS. She is often seen with Windows NT-tan and 95-tan but has an inseparable relationship with DOS Kitty as Windows 3.x is highly dependent on DOS especially compared to its successors which mainly used a stripped-down version of DOS for booting.
See also: