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That last feature was never in the public releases of MS-DOS, only the underlying DOS system in Windows 95. If you have the right hardware, you can do networking and use basic web browsers.
There was nothing particularly exciting about DOS or Microsoft, at least back then. It was pervasive but not iconic. If I'm ...
To get the answer, just put a decimal point in the number "50"—my first Microsoft product was MS-DOS 5.0.
It’s interesting that they would preserve what’s arguably the least popular version of MS-DOS in this way, but then again there’s something to be said for having a historical record on what ...