I don't have Parallels anymore, but to debug this I tried to install
FreeDOS 1.0 using VMWare. I hit the same problem you found: after
using XFDisk to partition the drive, reboot, and then you see invalid
operating system.
The reason is that the BIOS presented by VMWare (or in your case,
Yes, I used the same trick, it's exactly like a REAL machine ;-)
Alain
Jim Hall escreveu:
I don't have Parallels anymore, but to debug this I tried to install
FreeDOS 1.0 using VMWare. I hit the same problem you found: after
using XFDisk to partition the drive, reboot, and then you see
On Sun, 2007-04-01 at 14:09 +0200, Eric Auer wrote:
Hi Roger,
To fix, I re-ran mkisofs on the iso file after mounting it.
I've then posted instructions here:
http://wiki.fdos.org/Installation/BootDiskCreateCDROM
Can you also provide information on how the re-compiled
iso file differs
Hello.
I would suggest to add into FreeDOS any encryption utility, as crypt
in the FreeBSD for example.
http://vmsone.com/~decuslib/decus/secure/idea_v1_1.tar_z : IDEA
implementation, easy to compile with Pacific C for MS-DOS, v7.51 and
DJGPP Version 2.03.
--
ice 0x696365*gmail,com
I would suggest to add into FreeDOS any encryption utility, as crypt
in the FreeBSD for example.
http://vmsone.com/~decuslib/decus/secure/idea_v1_1.tar_z : IDEA
implementation, easy to compile with Pacific C for MS-DOS, v7.51 and
DJGPP Version 2.03.
IDEA is not a free cryptographic