FUZOMA is a collection of over 40 entertaining educational programs.
Pre-reading, English vocabulary, math, logic, science, music, computer literacy, and more. Only the most imaginative, most engaging, and most effective programs have been hand-picked from a rich history of educational software that goes back over twenty years.
FUZOMA is bootable from CD or USB.
You don’t have to install anything if you don’t want to. Your computer doesn’t even need a working hard drive.
FUZOMA is accessible.
The project was started at a primary school for the Deaf in Kenya. It works for the neediest learners, and it works on the oldest computers (tested on a 386 with 8MB RAM!).
FUZOMA is unique.
No other bootable software distribution bundles this kind of variety into a kid-friendly package.
Oh, and it’s small enough to fit on a floppy.
And it’s free.
Note: USB floppy drives cannot fit FUZOMA on a single disk, |
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Take a look at everything you get!
(Or see what’s changed since the previous versions.)
THE MAIN MENU | |
KIDSMENU Freeware & Commercial-turned-Freeware, David Dunfield |
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EARLY READING & EARLY MATH |
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John’s Animated Game Freeware, Flix Productions |
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Bob the Porcupine A simple side-scroller in which the terrain is dynamically generated as capital letters. Good implicit exposure to the alphabet and low-stakes gameplay. |
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Letter Fishing Freeware, Lou Duchez |
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Bozzball Shareware: You can order twice the number of lessons from Bozz Software. |
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Counting with Apples Public Domain, John Schnittker |
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Animal Math Open Source Freeware, Donald L. Pavia |
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Math Boat Public Domain, John Schnittker |
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ENGLISH VOCAB, SPELLING, & USEAGE |
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Vocabumonkey Freeware, John Schnittker. |
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Animal Match ”Free with magazine”-turned-Freeware, COMPUTE!’s Gazette (December 1987) |
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Word Rescue Episode One Shareware: Additional episodes can be ordered from Redwood Games. |
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Word Gallery Shareware: Additional words can be ordered via snail mail from KinderWare. |
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Wunder Book Shareware: An additional 200 colorful pictures can be ordered from Polysoft / Hung Le |
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Dragon’s Keep Commercial-turned-Freeware, Al Lowe (Sierra) |
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Billy Open Source Freeware, Gregory G. Leedberg |
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MATH, ENGLISH, TIME, MUSIC, & ART |
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MathTest Freeware, Kenneth Perrine |
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Super Worms Math Arena Freeware, Mike Wiering |
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Super Worms 3D Racing Shareware: Extra tracks and powerups can be ordered from Wiering Software. |
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Math Attack ”Free with magazine”-turned-Freeware, COMPUTE!’s Gazette (October1986) |
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Math Mileage Commercial, but distributed here with special permission from the author: Marcia Burrows (K-Byte / CBS Software) |
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Number Munchers Tribute Freeware, Nick Andren |
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Bali’s Calc Shareware-turned-Freeware, Bálint Tóth |
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School-Mom Plus Trialware: You may be able to use this program indefinitely and get technical support by registering it with Motes Educational Software / Dr. Andrew “Andy” Motes; however, the rights to the software were sold by Major Motes to an unknown party in 1999. |
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SCIENCE & COMPUTER SCIENCE |
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Pixel Puzzler Freeware / ”Free with magazine,” George Leritte & John Romero (Softdisk). Distributed here with special permission from the publisher: Flat Rock Software.[A Softdisk distributor, PC Disk Downunder, released this program as freeware on their BBS in Dec. 1989 (working download). It was later released in Softdisk’s Feb. 1990 issue of “Big Blue Disk.” |
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Atomix Commercial-turned-Freeware, Softtouch / Thalion Software GmbH |
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Tank Time Shareware-turned-Freeware, Klaus Reimer |
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XPL0 Open Source Freeware, Loren Blaney |
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EARLY LOGIC | |
Falling Tetrominoes Open Source Freeware, Boreal’s entry in the Hugi Size Coding Competition Series |
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PC-Man Commercial, but distributed here with special permission from the author: Greg Kuperberg / Orion Software |
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Simon 1K Public Domain, Henrik Jansson |
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Number Guess Open Source Freeware, Loren Blaney |
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Memory (Concentration ) Open Source Freeware, Loren Blaney |
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Help the Frog Open Source Freeware, Loren Blaney |
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Load the Truck Open Source Freeware, Loren Blaney |
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COMPUTER USE & ADVANCED LOGIC |
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Mars Freeware, Tim Clarke |
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Tater Head Freeware, Axelgraphics |
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BabyType Freeware, Doka Studios |
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FUZOMA Edit Open Source Freeware, Paul Blair |
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Donald Duck’s Playground Commercial-turned-Freeware, Al Lowe (Sierra / Disney) |
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Matey Open Source Freeware, Loren Blaney |
Additionally, there are many programs that work behind the scenes to make FUZOMA possible. Credit is due to the following:
- FreeDOS Kernel 2039 FAT16 (which I modified), Jack R. Ellis’ RDISK 2010-08-15 (which I modified), Color Laptop Utility 1.2, IBM PC-DOS 3.30 Command Interpreter (which I modified; version 7.10 is freely available from IBM), Rugxulo’s 7zx, FreeDOS Cutemouse 1.9.1, WorkTSRs 3.2 Mark/Unmark, Brett Johnson’s Scancode 5.00 & Slowdown 2.00, Ciriaco García de Celis’ HBreak 5.5, Horst Schaeffer’s DriveReady 2.2, Miha Peternel’s C64s 2.52 Shareware
There is no commercial software in FUZOMA. Some programs are ex-commercial, but have since been made freely available by their authors, eg. Al Lowe’s games and IBM’s PC-DOS. Due to limited space and a noble cause, however, I do allow myself some flexibility in choosing versions. If Al Lowe is only technically giving away the Amiga version of his games, but the Atari files are smaller, I use them. And even if, technically, only the newest DOS 7.10 is free from IBM, I don’t flinch at using the older version 3.30. You get the idea. If I’m causing you or anyone you know to lose money, let me know and I’ll fix it. Similarly, if you like any of the shareware software, try to buy it!
FUZOMA Back Story: My school’s computers were sitting unused in the library. They’re old, 1994-era, and no one knew what to do with them. Trying to boot to Windows would bring up errors, which had convinced the other teachers that the computers were broken. One has a USB port (but the old version of Windows didn’t support USB), and another has a busted CD-ROM drive, and none had more than 32MB or memory. The only way to load software onto them was through floppy disks. I started transferring files in order to fix all the specific Windows problems, but I quickly decided that it would be better to make a single boot disk that could benefit others in similar situations.
The idea of a bootable floppy disk with a compilation of useful programs isn’t new. See:
- Bob Newell’s Bootables (variety)
- TechW0rm Floppy (general utilities)
- Bart’s Network Boot Disk (networking tools)
Similarly, the idea of a ton of kids’ programs on a bootable disk isn’t unique:
- Sugar on a Stick (One Laptop Per Child)
- EduPuppy (for “older” (128MB RAM) computers)
- Freeduc
- Edubuntu
Unfortunately, none of the USB or CD-based solutions worked at my school, for the following reasons:
- The currently-available bootable CDs and USBs have relatively steep memory requirements.
- Even if I buy more RAM, overcomplicated start-menu-style interfaces make it difficult for students to find the educational content.
- The educational content itself is rather weak.
I believe I have addressed all these issues with FUZOMA. It only needs 8MB of RAM, the menu is easy to use, and there’s plenty of good educational content. Enjoy it… I know my kids do!
14 replies on “FUZOMA Educational Software”
You have done an incredible job with this software collection! I came here just looking for vocabumonkey for my son to play on an older computer, but I leave with not only even more games for my little child but a cool disk to give to other non-profits I sometimes deal with. THANK YOU!!!
I like to learn software!!
But i’ll learn it better in future when i’ll hav bought my own laptop!
As for now i’ll learn a lil bit! gimme more to learn.
Thanks n bye! see you some other time!!
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Great job!
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FUZOMA is Great!
No, I’m not and educator or a software engineer. I’m just an old DOS-head from way-back who came across FUZOMA while researching FreeDOS (my new DOS of choice), because I’ve recently started putting together an old DOSBox; loading it up with Games, Media, fave Utilities and the like. FUZOMA has a happy place in my menu next to the other few educational titles I have loaded (I use JoyEmu 4.1 and ACCESS 5 RC2, a wonderful freeware graphical front-end, to launch all my DOS software). I even made a multi-boot CD with all five versions so I could check ’em out. The newest (1.4) is by far the best. ^_^
I’m especially enjoying Fuzoma Edit 1.4… it’s now my default DOS text editor of choice! I had to write a little .BAT script to copy the .DSK file to the current directory when calling it and then delete it upon exiting, otherwise the desktop wouldn’t appear, but this allows FE 1.4 to be called from anywhere on my HardDrive. Thank you for this nice little utility.
It’s great the way you’ve dedicated your time and resources to this gem of a BootDisk, and I really hope to see another update sometime in the future. Please keep up the good work PB… I’m a FUZOMA Fan!
P.S. I read your version history from top to bottom. Quite a few changes since the initial versions. Interesting and educational stuff (I learned a few things). Hopefully you’ll update the version history page if you ever release FUZOMA 1.5 (or dare I say 2.0?).
the world is a small village.thanks to the heart of passing over what you have discovered for the benefit of the rest.IT is the way way to go and you have demonstrated that and willingness to share.Thanks
Such a great idea. Kudos to you!
I had no idea such a project existed until I came across it from the FreeDOS wikipedia. When thousands of computers are being thrown away in the western world, and the kids in the third world can’t dream of even owning a computer, your project opens the possibility for every child to have a computer that would open their eyes to a new world. Too bad international logistics keeps this from happening right now. If there was only a way to solve that problem…
This is freakin’ awesome. I’m going to go through my pile of old laptops and parts to try and resurrect one so me and my seven year old daughter can enjoy these together. I indeed have old 386 and 486SX era laptops, so I might be one of the few who will be struggling to meet the 8mb RAM desired =D. That and fixing broken hinges so the screens dont go flying off!
Again, thanks for putting this collection together. I’m tempted to try “installing” FUZOMA on the hard drives of these dilapidated beasts if I can get them that far – for ultimate “kid/adult ADHD gaming appliances” =D
Absolutely great job. I’m sure my grand kids will have hours of enjoyment. Thanks
There’s lots of kids without computers, and a mentality out there that old computers aren’t good for anything. This set of carefully-selected programs is a great way to easily breathe new life into old computers and let more kids learn and have fun. What could be better than to make an attic, garage sale, or second-hand store PC (or my new 3-GHz Windows machine if I want to) into something that kids would be very interested in?
(Paul, you need not repost this, but I didn’t know how else to contact you. I am the author of Mathtest and was really pleased to come across FUZOMA. I’m excited you found Mathtest good for inclusion! The webpage address you have for Mathtest is an old address. The new website is http://mathtest.academiken.com. Can you update it? A question for you… I have been intending to write Mathtest for newer systems (perhaps as a Flash game), but hadn’t considered the 16-bit platform. One thing that’s missing from Mathtest as it is is mouse support! Judging from your experience with FUZOMA and computers in far-away places, do you think there would be a lot of benefit in adding mouse support?)
Which tools are needed for coding fuzoma-like stuff? Is FreeBasic enough?