Hi, I am still having problems making an intaller from CD. I came across
an HP machine (MS219BR) that no drive recognizes and also external USB
CD drivers. So...
How can I make a big (6Mb) bootable image to use in the CD?
This is the only part of the CD that I can read on *any* machine, I am
Op 15-6-2011 16:51, Alain Mouette schreef:
Hi, I am still having problems making an intaller from CD. I came across
an HP machine (MS219BR) that no drive recognizes and also external USB
CD drivers. So...
I'm not understanding your situation, got some more details?
Seems like you've got a
On Mon, 13 Jun 2011 22:43:00 Eric Auer wrote:
For those who read mails but do not follow all URLs,
and to already give some feedback and plug ads for
similar tools, DOSUTILS contains:
First of all thank you for your feed back. Though i think some additional
comments could be useful :-)
Hi!
RPN - perform integer calculations
If you need floating point: The 1024 byte(!) calc387.com will be
fun for you. For example Rugxulo's Ruffidea distro contains a copy
of the tool :-)
True, RPN can't do floating point. And even though it can be used
interactively, its main purpose
SCRDUMP - a utility to dump parts of the screen to a file
With a hotkey as TSR, I assume?
Nope. Again this utility is most useful within batch files (e.g.
autoexec.bat). Typically it is called twice, once before and a second
time right after the command whichs output is to be copied to a
Em 15-06-2011 11:51, Alain Mouette escreveu:
How can I make a big (6Mb) bootable image to use in the CD?
This is the only part of the CD that I can read on *any* machine, I am
using isolinux)
With lots of help fom Eric Auer, I managed to make a bootable image with
FreeDOS. Here is how I did
You can look at my PRTSCR utility which works with the PrintScreen
key, available on my web site:
http://bretjohnson.us
Oops!
There is indeed a PRTSCR utility there, but it is an older, simpler version
that doesn't have all of the features I mentioned. The version with all of the
new
If certain programs are loaded immediately after booting, the
computer appears to be locked, but after moving the mouse
everything is back to normal, and the machine will not lock again
until the next boot.
Two examples of such programs are: the WBAT menu by Horst
Schäffer, and the DosZip file