To: opendos AT delorie DOT com Date: Sun, 9 Jul 2000 21:52:27 -0700 Subject: Re: Advanced DOS for Beginners (was: Re: How to unsubscribe) Message-ID: <20000709.231406.-335503.2.domanspc@juno.com> X-Mailer: Juno 4.0.9 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Juno-Line-Breaks: 0-58,60-104 X-Juno-Att: 0 X-Juno-RefParts: 0 From: Robert W Moss Reply-To: opendos AT delorie DOT com Try to get a copy of Partition Magic to do the Job. It does nondestructive partitioning, and can set several active partitions for installation of different Operating systems. Of course WIN98 is a 32bit FAT partition and all of your DOS's will have to be on 16bit FAT partitions. DR DOS 7.02 is a step or two removed from Novell DOS 7. Since you are in the USA you might try to get ahold of a book published by SAMS Publishing in 1994. It was authored by Jonathan Kamin and titled Novell DOS 7 Unleashed. ISBN 0-672-30328-0. This book goes into great detail on how to use Novell DOS7 and most of the stuff should be still current, or at least help give you some idea of how to set up the system to your taste. In the first paragraph of the introduction he says: "When Novell acquired Digital Research, it took on an awesome responsibility: keeping what was already the best DOS on the market at the technological cutting edge. And Novell has delivered." "DR DOS was the first DOS to include multiple configurations, an integrated file-undeletion utility, hard-disk defragmenter, file-transfer utility, disk-compression utility, and on-line help system. Novell DOS 7 provides a new and consistent interface for all these utilities, as well as the built-in text editor and system-setup utility. In addition, DR DOS has always had the most flexible command set -- another tradition carried on in Novell DOS 7. To top it all off, the system includes what may be the most advanced memory-management utilities available, and a true multi-tasking system." [I think this really was when Bill Gates really got into the "Burn that other DOS at any cost.', mentality. Not only did they have the audacity to put out a better DOS, but they even included Personal Network Software Package, and this was something he could not do. ] I don't know if it is available in any other languages or if it was sold overseas in english or another language. Possibly it would be available through Amazon.com or one of the old/used book sites. I got several of my old computer books that way. Awhile back there was a post about a Caldera Open Dos book with a CD ROM and I believe it included source code on the CD. If whoever posted that one could resend the info including the ISBN number you could probably get it. And no, whoever always asks, I don't have the text in ASCII code. I also seem to remember someone mentioning checking at the Novell web site for some info which could possibly be left over from the days just before caldera took over the DOS business. On Sun, 9 Jul 2000 19:51:31 -0400 (EDT) Paul O Bartlett writes: > This afternoon I downloaded DR-DOS 7.02 from Lineo to start to > take a look at it. Unless I overlooked something, I noticed that > the > documentation was somewhere between skimpy and nonexistent, on that > site at least. However, I saved some old posts which have some URLs > for some other sites which may have docs (I prefer to read the > instructions before assembly), so I will take a look at them before > pestering people with a lot of questions. > > But I do have a couple of items up front. It has been expressed > > on this list that DR-DOS 7.02 is preferable to 7.03 due to some bugs > > in the latter, which is why I downloaded 7.02. But that directory > on Lineo also has a subdirectory with a group of updates, I presume > bug fixes. (I downloaded them, too.) Does anyone have any comments > > on the update files? > > At the moment I have a fairly large C: drive. If a disk has > only a > single partition on it, the old MS-DOS FDISK would in effect wipe > out > existing files when partitioning it. Does DR-DOS's FDISK do the > same? > I would suppose so. But I do want to keep Win98 around, and it > would > be a major pain to try to back up and then restore hundreds of MB of > files. Any ideas? (My machine does have a 100MB-size Iomega > Zipdrive, > but even so it would be a tedious operation, especially with the > need > to make a new partition bootable if I want to be able to bring Win98 > back up.) > > Thanks in advance. > > -- > Paul mailto:bartlett AT smart DOT net > .......................................................... > Paul O. Bartlett, P.O. Box 857, Vienna, VA 22183-0857, USA > Keyserver (0xF383C8F9) or WWW for PGP public key > Home Page: http://www.smart.net/~bartlett > ________________________________________________________________ YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.