One approach would be to set up a freedos boot floppy and then make a bootable CD that boots to freedos and has fractint on it- see www.ultimatebootcd.com. Of course you'd still need a local FAT32 partition to save your work. Newer PCs can boot usb flash drives. Imagine a 1 gb usb flash drive that boots to freedos and has fractint. Then you could save the fractals to the flash drive. Investigating these sorts of things could be done by any technically savvy person, doesn't require any Fractint programming skills. I'm sure the bootcd approach is possible. The flash drive idea is more bleeding edge. I know some computers can boot Linux from a thumb drive, not sure about DOS. All of the above solutions would require freedos to be legal, but it probably wouldn't be too hard to publish a kit that someone with DOS could use to make threir own CD. The old fashioned approach would be to make a DOS floppy with the appropriate extended/expanded memory drivers, and make a FAT32 partition with fractint. See www.bootdisk.com. Tim