You know, a so-called DOS box, or even that command prompt that we were using before.
They can be found by using tools such as Total Commander or in the DOS box.
Undocumented structures used by Windows make the DOS box unreliable.
And presumably, if you opened a DOS box and did a netstat -an.
So you launch a so-called "DOS box," or command prompt, and type netstat.
So it may be that the particular instance of the netstat command is buggy, and it's crashing the DOS box.
This was the environment which Microsoft created to allow 16-bit applications, basically the so-called "DOS box," to function.
Even today, the editor I'm using, Brief, runs in a DOS box.
The DOS box, relying on a combination of hardware and software, has these capabilities:
It's a command, very useful command that I often run in a DOS box.