Sender: root AT gull DOT mail DOT pas DOT earthlink DOT net Message-ID: <3B16640D.A83A6F02@earthlink.net> Date: Thu, 31 May 2001 09:32:29 -0600 From: Thomas A Webb Organization: Wordwonder.com - an E-zine X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.75 [en] (X11; U; Linux 2.2.17 i586) X-Accept-Language: en MIME-Version: 1.0 To: OpenDosList Subject: DRDOS and IP References: <200105311448 DOT HAA25867 AT snipe DOT mail DOT pas DOT earthlink DOT net> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Reply-To: opendos AT delorie DOT com "da Silva, Joe" wrote: --------- > However, what I was asking about the Trumpet TCP/IP stack was ... > is that the Trumpet stack for Windoze or the one for DOS? Also, I > am interested to know if your "IE5 over W3.1 install" used M$-DOS > or DR-DOS as the underlying O/S? > I'm using the Win31 version of trumpet, and dr-dos as the platform. > BTW, I cannot agree with your posting about Lan Manager vs. Novell, > as I find the Lan Manager (MS Client) stuff uses far more conventional > memory (particularly as the Novell Client32 stuff could run in extended > memory, leaving lots of free upper memory too :-). I completely agree that Novell is better cleaner stuff than Microsoft's lan manager. I was reacting to the idea running *both*. I was an IT manager for years in an environment with hundreds of PCs in facilities spread all over the country, and I standardized on Novell because of it's stability and clean use of resources. Novell architecture was not designed with the Internet in mind, and when you want transparent access to the Internet and IP services, a cobbled up combo makes no sense to me in that it involves layers in the protocol stack that add opportunities for neurotic behavior (both computer and operator :-) ) My choices lean to simplicity, since I'm the one that has to fix it when it breaks :-) INMO, if we step back a pace and look at what we are doing, it's often better to use a simple solution that gets the functionality we want rather than adding bricks to an existing edifice. I have personally used SOS, XFS, Lanmanager, and Novell as shared-workspace networking solutions for DRDOS/MSDOS, and most or all of the functionality I was looking for is available in any one of them. Whatever floats your boat, in the final analysis.. -- Thomas Webb Come visit at http://wordwonder.com