Thanks - yes, I thought I would keep and use the smaller installation
partition for recovery and future :) upgrades. It's not in the way of
anything.
I'll look into EtherDFS today. My main computer runs on Windows 10, which
is always a challenge with sharing/permission rights due to builtin
> On Nov 12, 2020, at 7:02 PM, Marv wrote:
> [...]
>
> I copied everything on the FreeDos 1.3 Live CD over to the 1GB partition
> using Windows 2000. Then I disconnected the new drive with Windows 2000 and
> made the old 4.3GB drive the master.
>
> Next, I rebooted to the Windows Live CD
On Thu, Nov 12, 2020 at 07:01:07PM -0500, Marv wrote:
> I did order an external USB floppy to make it easier to trade small files
> with my other computers.
>
> And the best news is my LAN came up first try!
So won't it be more comfortable to share these files using network?
--
regards,
Thought I'd share my experience getting FreeDos working on my "new"
machine. None of the official FreeDos installation methods liked its CD
drive, and its USB port wasn’t bootable, so I had to find another way to
install FreeDos. This is what worked for me. I’m sure there are other and
possibly
On 11/11/2020 9:10 AM, Marv wrote:
Ralf - I gave up on that motherboard with the onboard PCIe Realtek
network adapter and picked up a circa 1999 Intel Pentium II machine
with (2) Adaptec ANA-6911 PCI network adapter boards. I'm pretty sure
I found the right NDIS drivers for them. It also has a
Maybe "generic" NE2000 packet driver will do (I mean FreeDOS)?
Something like this:
https://dos.retro.software/downloads/download/300-ne2000-compatible-nic-drivers/1470-ne2000-packet-driver
--
regards,
Zbigniew
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Freedos-user mailing list
Ralf - I gave up on that motherboard with the onboard PCIe Realtek network
adapter and picked up a circa 1999 Intel Pentium II machine with (2)
Adaptec ANA-6911 PCI network adapter boards. I'm pretty sure I found the
right NDIS drivers for them. It also has a spare ISA slot, so I have that
option,
On 11/9/2020 7:35 AM, Marv wrote:
I assume rtl8139 is a generic virtual driver and is the only choice
for a virtual Realtek adapter. My actual network adapter identifies as
a rtl8111/8168B. but says 8111GR on the chip. I realize my virtual
installation isn't going to use my physical network
My ongoing saga of trying to get networking up on FreeDos - I decided to
install Linux Mint and QEMU on the machine. Then I did a virtual
installation of FreeDos under QEMU. All went ok, and I can run FreeDos
virtual just fine. Next, I tried to set up networking on my virtual FreeDos
using the
Looking at my BIOS settings, it looks like this board does support PXE
boot. I'm not familiar with PXE, so I'll have to read up on it. I had also
thought about installing Linux and FreeDos in separate partitions with a
dual boot and seeing if that might solve my network issue under FreeDos.
On
> > Can anyone suggest a PCIe network adapter for FreeDos? One that I
> > can get a packet driver or NDIS driver for. My FreeDos computer
> > doesn't have a regular PCI slot and I've given up trying to get the onboard
> > network adapter to work.
> Realtek 8139 has NDIS drivers, E1000 both
Just an update to my network adapter issue. I gave up on it and moved on to
serial communications. I simply needed to be able to transfer files back
and forth between my Windows 10 laptop and my FreeDos machine. I am
successfully doing that using Kermit 3.14 on FreeDos and Kermit 95 on
Windows 10.
On Sat, Nov 07, 2020 at 11:23:49AM -0500, Marv wrote:
> You have a good point. I'm ready to give up on this motherboard and find an
> older (and cheap) desktop with appropriate card slots. Too bad - this board
> has some things I wanted like serial, parallel, PS2, VGA, plus HDMI,
> USB2/USB3, and
Thanks - yes, I did try ODI, but had the same results. Drivers install and
load ok, but no communication. It's time for me to move on, I think.
On Sat, Nov 7, 2020 at 10:47 AM Jerome Shidel wrote:
> Have you tried any of the drivers from
> http://www.georgpotthast.de/sioux/packet.htm ?
>
You have a good point. I'm ready to give up on this motherboard and find an
older (and cheap) desktop with appropriate card slots. Too bad - this board
has some things I wanted like serial, parallel, PS2, VGA, plus HDMI,
USB2/USB3, and SATA3.
On Sat, Nov 7, 2020 at 11:05 AM ZB wrote:
> On
On Sat, Nov 07, 2020 at 10:45:31AM -0500, Jerome Shidel wrote:
> Have you tried any of the drivers from
> http://www.georgpotthast.de/sioux/packet.htm ?
If I may suggest something: maybe instead of trying to "rape" obviously
DOS-incompatible hardware it would be better idea to run FreeDOS on
Have you tried any of the drivers from
http://www.georgpotthast.de/sioux/packet.htm ?___
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I have seen this happen on OS/2 with porting Linux and FreeBSD NIC
drivers. The issue is that a small chip next to the main chips seems to
be wired up differently or different chip. You get NO DHCP lease on LAN.
Or when you set it to static no data traffic comes in out and out. The
realtek
Thanks, Tom - unfortunately, the motherboard I have available only has a
PCI Express slot (no PCI slots). I know Startech has a PCIe to PCI adapter
for $40, but then I would still need to buy a suitable PCI network card. I
don't really want to invest that much in this project. I've looked at a lot
> Can anyone suggest a PCIe network adapter for FreeDos? One that I
> can get a packet driver or NDIS driver for. My FreeDos computer
> doesn't have a regular PCI slot and I've given up trying to get the onboard
> network adapter to work.
while it's MSDOS based, this
Marv composed on 2020-11-05 17:39 (UTC-0500):
> Thanks Tom - I see the Realtek 8139 is fairly popular with DOS users and I
> can find PCI cards with that chip. But so far no luck finding a PCIe card
> that uses the 8139. Will keep looking.
If you don't mind spending money, there are adapters:
Thanks Tom - I see the Realtek 8139 is fairly popular with DOS users and I
can find PCI cards with that chip. But so far no luck finding a PCIe card
that uses the 8139. Will keep looking.
On Thu, Nov 5, 2020 at 11:19 AM tom ehlert wrote:
>
> > Can anyone suggest a PCIe network adapter for
> Can anyone suggest a PCIe network adapter for FreeDos? One that I
> can get a packet driver or NDIS driver for. My FreeDos computer
> doesn't have a regular PCI slot and I've given up trying to get the onboard
> network adapter to work.
Realtek 8139 has NDIS drivers, E1000 both packet and
Can anyone suggest a PCIe network adapter for FreeDos? One that I can get a
packet driver or NDIS driver for. My FreeDos computer doesn't have a
regular PCI slot and I've given up trying to get the onboard network
adapter to work.
If not, has anyone tried a PCIe to PCI adapter (Startech for
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