DESQview does not provide a graphical user interface (
GUI). While Quarterdeck did provide suites of programming libraries and utilities to support the development of software to use its features, these never became widely popular. DESQview's ability to run most software with no modification and the cost of "run-time" licenses, combined with the costs of the development suites themselves made this an unreasonable combination for commercial shrink-wrapped software publishers and vendors. Microsoft released
Windows 3.0 with its own memory management and multitasking features. While DESQview was far faster, smaller, and more stable, it was more expensive and didn't include support for the graphical features of MS Windows. The decline of QEMM started with the bundling of a memory manager in
Digital Research's
DR DOS 5.0, released in 1990. To catch on, Microsoft included its own
EMM386 in
MS-DOS 5.0, while previously the memory management functionality was only available with Windows. QEMM could still be used instead, notably with
Windows 3.1x, but only for incremental benefit. Sales of QEMM declined. In August 1994, after three quarters of losses, the company laid off 25% of their employees and the CEO, president, and founder Terry Myers resigned. As users moved from DESQview to other platforms, notably Windows 3.x and OS/2, third party utility authors wrote utility programs that emulated some DESQview API functions to allow suitably equipped DOS programs to co-operate with these OS. The most notable are
TAME (for Windows) and
OS/2SPEED (for OS/2).
DESQview/X Quarterdeck eventually also released a product named
DESQview/X (
DVX), which is an
X Window System server running under DOS and DESQview and thus provides a GUI to which X software (mostly
Unix) could be ported. DESQview/X had three window managers that it launched with,
X/Motif,
OPEN LOOK, and
twm. The default package contained only
twm, the others were costly optional extras, as was the ability to interact on
TCP/IP networks.
Mosaic was ported to DVX. DVX itself can serve DOS programs and the 16-bit Windows environment across the network as X programs, which made it useful for those who wished to run DOS and Windows programs from their Unix workstations. The same functionality is available with some versions of
NCD Wincenter.
NetWare Access Server Internetworking company
Novell developed a product called NetWare Access Server (NAS) incorporating features of DESQview 386 and
pcAnywhere. The DESQview multitasking support was used to create an environment into which up to 16 PC and Macintosh clients can login remotely to access NetWare services and run DOS applications.
DESQview after X DESQview development continued in parallel with DESQview/X. After ceasing development on DESQview/X, another version of DESQview was released. QEMM was still developed after the discontinuation of DESQview, and a version compatible with
Windows 98 was released. In the mid-1990s, Quarterdeck tried to recast itself as an
Internet company, releasing a version of the Mosaic web browser. Eventually, the company was acquired by
Symantec. ==Reception==