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Announcing it in March 1995,<ref name="Network_World_1995"/><ref name="PCMag_1995"/> Novell introduced a new 32-bit DOS/Windows [[Personal NetWare#NetWare clients for DOS|NetWare]] client ([[Client 32]] based on ODI32/NIOS)<ref>{{cite web |
Announcing it in March 1995,<ref name="Network_World_1995"/><ref name="PCMag_1995"/> Novell introduced a new 32-bit DOS/Windows [[Personal NetWare#NetWare clients for DOS|NetWare]] client ([[Client 32]] based on ODI32/NIOS)<ref>{{cite web |
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|url=https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Netware+Input%2FOutput+Subsystem |
|url=https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Netware+Input%2FOutput+Subsystem |
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|title=Netware Input/Output Subsystem}}</ref> in 1996, replacing the former 16-bit client based on [[Open Data-Link Interface|ODI]]/VLM. Its NIOS component ([[NetWare I/O Subsystem]]<ref name="Network_World_1995"/><ref name="Liebing_1996"/><ref name="Hendrick_1996"/>) used techniques similar to [[ |
|title=Netware Input/Output Subsystem}}</ref> in 1996, replacing the former 16-bit client based on [[Open Data-Link Interface|ODI]]/VLM. Its NIOS component ([[NetWare I/O Subsystem]]<ref name="Network_World_1995"/><ref name="Liebing_1996"/><ref name="Hendrick_1996"/>) used techniques similar to [[DPMS]] to relocate and run NLMs in [[protected mode]] and [[extended memory]] in order to reduce the [[conventional memory]] footprint of the client down to 2 to 5 KB.<ref name="Paul_1997_NWDOSTIP"/><ref name="Liebing_1996"/> |