If by Re-mastering you mean you want a new clean Win98 installation
then no problem.
make sure you have all the necessary Disks for any programs you want
to re- install as well as the Drivers for you Graphics > Sound card
and
other peripherals.
For a simple practical guide to installation procedures have a look at
this site
http://website.lineone.net/~b_field
good luck
Clifford
Remove "shoe" to reply
Other than the fact that it is illegal - you would be breaking the
terms of your daughters license - so she could get into trouble and
you would essentially be stealing software - breaking copyright and
piracy laws.
See ya
CHRIS
Next DJing/Club/Gig/Reviews
http://www.darkfire.co.uk
http://www.penguinsclub.co.uk
"Devils Island" for you laddie...
Probably for life.
Daughter to the "Colonies" ...if she's lucky.
> I suggest you look over on the 98 ng.
Why ?
>I hope you weren't talking about something you don't understand, were you?
Nope - I know what I am talking about W98 is a *single* user license
therefore if you have it on two machines you are breaking the terms of
the license and as such putting yourself and the owner of the original
copy at risk of prosecution.
Up to you whether you do it or not I was just pointing out the
inherent dangers and illegallity of it.
Unless you are extremely unlucky you will find that Win98 Cd
contains all the drivers that you need for Graphics and Sound.
and will install them for you.
The Printer drivers for win95 will propably be OK in 98.
but you can always download from web if you need to upgrade.
Clifford.
Packard bell employ a system where a computer has 'Hidden Sector'
information stored on the hard drive which tell the computer that it is
a packard bell, and what master CD it can use.
The older machine will have little of no information written onto the
hard drive, however it will be a little different for the Windows 98
machine.
The 98 machine has a hidden sector on the hard drive that contains
information on the system serial number, part number and software build.
It also has in the same hidden sector a list of the hard ware in the
system which then tell the remaster process what drivers to copy over.
This information is also copied to the DMI in the BIOS, where it is
stored permanatly.
The recovery precess checks that both the hidden sector on the hard
drive and the one in the DMI bios are present and matching before it
will allow remaster.
You can try it on the old machine but you will get a message such as
'This computer has no valid information' or 'Not a valid computer' and
then be dropped out to dos.
Cheers
--
Richard (The Sane)
Never run out of Altitude, Airspeed and Ideas all at the same time
(Take away my SANITY to reply)
What age PB machine?
Dunno, can't remember, it was a year or two ago, i'm not looking for an
argument y'know just said i did one ok thats all.
John
Wouldn't FDISK sort that out. I've installed the same Win98 CD on several
systems (using different license numbers, restoring friends PCs who didn't
get a Win98 cd with their new systems) without any problems.
Alan
> >I hope you weren't talking about something you don't understand, were
you?
> Nope - I know what I am talking about W98 is a *single* user license
> therefore if you have it on two machines you are breaking the terms of
> the license and as such putting yourself and the owner of the original
> copy at risk of prosecution.
>
> Up to you whether you do it or not I was just pointing out the
> inherent dangers and illegallity of it.
>
> See ya
>
> CHRIS
>
> Next DJing/Club/Gig/Reviews
> http://www.darkfire.co.uk
> http://www.penguinsclub.co.uk
I have 1 copy of Moby's Play CD, but I have 4 CD players in the house.
Do I need to buy 4 copies of the CD, 1 for each CD player, or can I play the
one copy on all players?
See what I'm getting at?
I'm sure Mr Gates won't miss the £70 for the win95 to win98 upgrade license
Alan
> I have 1 copy of Moby's Play CD, but I have 4 CD players in the house.
>
> Do I need to buy 4 copies of the CD, 1 for each CD player, or can I play the
> one copy on all players?
>
> See what I'm getting at?
Can you run the single copy on all players at the same time?
See what I'm getting at?
--
===============================================
Chris Game <chri...@bigfoot.com>
===============================================
>Do I need to buy 4 copies of the CD, 1 for each CD player, or can I play the
>one copy on all players?
If you want to play all four simultaneously (Like the poster wantsed
to do with his W98) then you will need four copies - so you need to
wander off back down to the shop and buy four more (or you could
illegally copy the disk). If you move it around then fine - one copy
is enough. The poster wanted to run it on his machine and his
daughters at the same time.
See ya
CHRIS
Next Gig / DJ details /Reviews -
http://www.darkfire.co.uk
http://www.penguinsclub.co.uk
Don't forget the Fish for the Penguin on the 10th March
> In article <t9tjje5...@corp.supernews.co.uk>, interCHOPPEDzonePORK55
> @ANDhotmailHAM.com said
> >
> > > <also sent by mail>
> > > Simple answer. No
> > >
> > > Packard bell employ a system where a computer has 'Hidden Sector'
> > > information stored on the hard drive which tell the computer that it is
> > > a packard bell, and what master CD it can use.
> > >
> > > The older machine will have little of no information written onto the
> > > hard drive, however it will be a little different for the Windows 98
> > > machine.
> > >
> > > The 98 machine has a hidden sector on the hard drive that contains
> > > information on the system serial number, part number and software build.
> > > It also has in the same hidden sector a list of the hard ware in the
> > > system which then tell the remaster process what drivers to copy over.
> > > This information is also copied to the DMI in the BIOS, where it is
> > > stored permanatly.
> > > The recovery precess checks that both the hidden sector on the hard
> > > drive and the one in the DMI bios are present and matching before it
> > > will allow remaster.
> > >
> > > You can try it on the old machine but you will get a message such as
> > > 'This computer has no valid information' or 'Not a valid computer' and
> > > then be dropped out to dos.
> > >
> > > Cheers
> > >
> > > Richard (The Sane)
> >
> > Wouldn't FDISK sort that out. I've installed the same Win98 CD on several
> > systems (using different license numbers, restoring friends PCs who
> > didn't get a Win98 cd with their new systems) without any problems.
> >
> Nope, you can only get rid of it with debug. It is not a hidden
> partition, just a hidden sector. It is not too big either, just a couple
> of Kb.
> The packard bell remaster does not use a win98 CD, but a product
> recovery CD.
>
So if you use a 'virgin' w98 install floppy/CD then by using FDISK on the
HDD and then Installing it should be quite OK, if not, then dump the stupid
Packard Bell machine and get a decent one instead.
And if PB do use 'hidden sectors' on the HDD, that would mean that the only
way of upping the HDD size would be by getting a new drive presetup by PB,
sounds a bit stupid to me, as they would have to know about EVERY piece of
hardware attached to the machine, which cards are in which slots, etc.
totally unworkable.
Darren Northcott
SARPC+ROS4.02 ( a MickeyShaft free zone )
There are such things as secondry IDE channels, you know the idea, add a
second drive as slave to the first. Or is that too much to ask?
"Richard (The Sane)" <ric...@SANITYmisrule.freeserve.co.uk> wrote in
message news:MPG.150f5726b...@news.freeserve.net...
dean