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Home Page: http://www.seanet.com/~jasonrnorth
If you're not the lead dog, the view never changes
Doubt yourself, and the real world will eat you alive
The world doesn't revolve around you, it revolves around me
No skeletons in the closet; just decomposing corpses
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Dependence is Vulnerability:
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"Open the Pod Bay Doors please, Hal"
"I'm sorry, Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that.."
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/306559
Also, Google "dual boot"
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Paul Hovnanian mailto:Pa...@Hovnanian.com
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"The beauty of a chainsaw is that you don't have to start it. Just
show up with it." - Joe Walsh, on checking in to hotels
Or you can run Virtual PC on XP or later and run whatever OS you like
inside, simultaneously, if you like. It's got some gotchas, like
limited hardware access, but is adequate for a lot of things.
Stan
>Have ME on C, 95 on D. Besides unplugging C (hard to get to), how can I
>force a boot to the 95 HD? no option in BIOS to select different HDDs.
>JR
>Dweller in the cellar
The MS Windows, and I think MS DOS, are hardwired to boot from the
first sector on the "C:" disk.
John D.
(johnbslocombatgmaildotcom)
Somebody has to say it...get a newer MB on Ebay for $20
When my 386 board failed under warranty, the technician gave my instructions
how to fix it. In broken Chinglesh he told me to remove the harness and the
screws on the board then told me to carefully lift it out at a certain angle
and when I finished he said: "Now, trowww it awayyyyy!"
If you run Linux the installer probably set things up so you can boot
either the MS system or Linux. If not it is rather simple to configure
the Grub loader to do it as you can boot Linux from any disk.
(I don't understand why the guy wants to load "ME" or "95" anyway :-)
John D.
(johnbslocombatgmaildotcom)
Do you have an old DOS start-up floppy with fdisk on it? If so, you
might be able to go into fdisk, make the 'D' drive active, and then it
should boot from the D...that was 'should', no guarantees as we're
talking Micro$oft and old computer components.
Mike
That's basically what some of the multi-boot apps did, play with the
partition tables. Not my cup of tea, but somebody liked it... If you
do it, make sure you've got the partition tables backed up somewhere
else.
Stan
Some older but useful hardware runs under it. I keep a Win ME
computer for my scanner and OCR software. It's on my home network, so I
can scan and convert documents, then move them to another computer. It
also has the backup files for several websites & the FTP software. It
isn't used to browse the web or any other online application.
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Greed is the root of all eBay.
DPDT switch attached to Master/Slave jumpers, one way jumpers the master
on one drive and the slave on the other, and vice versa for the other
switch position.
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Steve Walker
Fusi...@verizonwallet.com (remove wallet to reply)
That will work on a old computer, but most newer IDE drives I see are
set up as Cable Select.
Most versions of Linux have a multi-partition boot routine you can install,
even if you don't run Linux. They'll find and flag any bootable partition,
then allow you to select the partition at boot time.
LLoyd
If they are on two physically different drives, you can hook up a DPDT
switch to the master/slave jumper on each drive.
The switch is attached to the front of the computer, and when the computer
is off, you flip the switch to select which drive you wish to boot to. When
you turn on the computer, the drive you want to boot into becomes the master
drive, and you boot into that OS. The switch has no effect once the
computer has booted.
I ran with this setup for a couple years dual booting W2k/WXP (before I
"had" to switch over to XP). Worked great.
Of course, with W95/W98, you might be able to just use a boot floppy.
Jon
I set up a DOS boot floppy with COMSPEC = C:\DOS\COMMAND.COM in the
Autoexec.bat so I could remove the floppy.
You could write a batch file named "95.bat" that runs D:\..\WIN.COM to
start Win 95 from the DOS prompt, or automatically.
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/142544
Sorry, I never played with ME.
jsw
Sound like a job for Smart Boot Manager
http://sourceforge.net/projects/btmgr/
download sbminst.exe
http://sourceforge.net/projects/btmgr/files/btmgr/3.7-1/sbminst.exe/download
put a diskette in drive A: then from a DOS/Command Prompt window enter:
sbminst -t us -d 0
to copy the files to the floppy.
Set your BIOS to boot from floppy and when it boots you'll be given a
choice of which drive to boot from. Screenshots on the website.
Steve