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jaclaz

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Everything posted by jaclaz

  1. No ideas, as said earlier there are reports of (partial) success (i.e. Windows 98 installed and then issues with some devices or drivers) but with setup /p i seemingly it installed: http://en.community.dell.com/support-forums/software-os/f/3524/t/3016125 jaclaz
  2. 180x120 AND oeminfo.ini http://www.trishtech.com/2010/02/change-oem-logo-in-windows-xp/ jaclaz
  3. I am not a subscriber as well but I can access it. Maybe it depends from the browser or your location. You may want to copy the link, paste it in a new browser window and then re-paste it and reload the page, my good ol' Opera has issues with the site but Chrome based browsers should work (just checked with Iron). jaclaz
  4. It is free once you will have paid money to subscribe, check again the posted scheme, step #1 requires that you pay money. jaclaz
  5. Maybe you could make use of DosBox: http://www.dosbox.com/ or vDos: https://www.vdos.info/ Or you could use VirtualBox and: http://virtualboxes.org/images/freedos/ jaclaz
  6. Usual steps: 1. Subscribe 2. Download 3. ??? 4. PROFIT!!! jaclaz
  7. Sure , that is correct ( in theory), but you never know what actually happens under the hood, just like ACPI, in theory Windows 98 supports it, but in practice it causes issues, possibly in connection with *some* not particularly "friendly" or "well coded" BIOSes (and specifically DELL has a record for modifying or botching BIOSes on their machines) anything (and the contrary of it) may happen, as you can see from the given reference years of hit-and-miss have been accumulated on the board, installing 98 or more mordern hardware is not as easy as it should be, but with some perseverance (and a lot of testing) I am pretty sure it is doable :. jaclaz
  8. It is "strange". While you may actually want to have two of Rloew's patches, the SATA one and the RAM one (for actual use of the PC), I have seen reports of people installing on that same machine model without issues, but haven't seen details about whether they were using a SATA or a IDE disk (in theory there should be no problems with a SATA disk if the BIOS is set in in "IDE compatibility mode" or similar, but you never know) You could try (just for the sake of confirming or excluding that the SATA disk is involved) to install the 98 on the 40 Gb IDE disk. If - by any chance - you have )or can borrow) a 512 Mb (or smaller) stick, you could exclude the possibility of "too much RAM" causing the issue. In any case, I would try removing one of the two 1 Gb sticks. Go through (I know it's a lot of info) this: http://www.msfn.org/board/topic/118097-day-to-day-running-win-9xme-with-more-than-1-gib-ram/ Or wait a bit, surely some of the members more "current" with windows 98 installs on "recent" hardware will chime in and assist you. jaclaz
  9. ...meanwhile in Cupertino ... http://www.theguardian.com/money/2016/feb/05/error-53-apple-iphone-software-update-handset-worthless-third-party-repair A software update that retroactively checks the otherwise and until then prefectly working device hardware and irreversibly bricks it (making you lose ALL your data). Not even the good MS guys have managed (yet ) to do something like this (or maybe they have it on the Lumia's, but that doesn't really count ) jaclaz
  10. Strangely enough, clonezilla won't actually produce a "clone" image (and "normally" not even ghost), but rather a "backup" image. Depending on which kind of image you want to make you might want to use Partition Saving instead: http://www.partition-saving.com/ See here for a quick examination of the differences between images and imaging apps: http://www.msfn.org/board/topic/157634-hard-disk-cloningimaging-from-inside-windows/?p=1007158 jaclaz
  11. @drugwash JFYI (and as an example) what I personally call the "worst BIOS of all", i.e. the "InsydeH2O" BIOS which is actually becoming very common on laptops, in some versions had (some say on purpose "blacklisted", some say "failed to mind their own business" or "whitelisted a few common sequences only") some given sequence in the MBR code (a small change had to be done - twice if I remember correctly - to grub4dos grldr.mbr to have it working). jaclaz
  12. Sure SQlite has a CLI version, if this is what you are asking: https://www.sqlite.org/cli.html jaclaz
  13. Not really-really. ONLY Windows NT based systems are seemingly "affected" by the device "Removable bit" (if this is what you are refeerring to, but if it is then it can be flipped on and off at will, once you get the "right" tool AND you manage to use it ). It is much more likely that the "Pendrive" has been "normally" formatted under a NT based system (and since it is "Removable" under this OS it has been NOT partitioned). BIOS's want partitioned devices and don't like "superfloppies" (and don't care about the "Removable bit"). Quick blast to the past : http://jaclaz.altervista.org/Projects/USB/USBstick.html (only to show how fast ten years pass by ) @Kizoky How (exactly) was the pendrive partitioned? Which OS does your "other" computer run? If any of the NT family use a suitable tool to partition and format the (removable) pendrive, such as the original HP tool, or this (fuwi's tool): http://www.911cd.net/forums//index.php?showtopic=21702 or RMPREPUSB: http://www.rmprepusb.com/ jaclaz
  14. And now, for no apparent reason, a link to Donkey's Stable , do check the WinExplorer there: http://www.donkeysstable.com/ http://www.donkeysstable.com/winexplorer.htm @drugwash Why, in my day, all we had was a Z80 with 1 (one) Kb of RAM, had to actually solder the board .... https://tinyapps.org/blog/misc/200702250700_why_in_my_day.html .... and we LIKED it! jaclaz
  15. Not really "always", many times this is not voluntary, simply the new version of the MS compilers changes default, Author does not check it and the result of re-compiling is a compiled executable that is "artificially" limited to newer OS's. A different case is when the Author uses an API call that does not exist on a "previous" OS (though not really my field of experience, I believe that - with some exceptions of course - there is often a way - IF the Author is willing to take the extra time - to avoid the new API call). In this latter case the executable is actually "incompatible" unless it is re-compiled with the needed replacement/workarounds. jaclaz
  16. Clues: http://www.dfrws.org/2010/proceedings/2010-315.pdf http://alumnus.caltech.edu/~pje/iso9660.html jaclaz
  17. Maybe I can, but I won't. Seemingly that stuff is some piece of WAREZ, which are a no-no. jaclaz
  18. In the case of Acronis .iso they are NOT "files/folders", they are "volumes or disk (or disc) images". I don't think that there are "easy" tools to do that , those Acronis .isos are most probably made through some "advanced" options of mkisofs, or of genisoimage or xorriso (or maybe they even developed an "internal" "iso making tool". jaclaz
  19. Sure , and there are also blogs that tell you how to make bulletproof coffee: https://www.bulletproofexec.com/bulletproof-coffee-recipe/ but this does not really mean that you have to believe what is written in them, nor actually prepare it (let alone actually drink that stuff). jaclaz
  20. Most probably (please read as surely) it is not really-really about "hidden files", but much more likely "hidden" volumes. Easiest would be Isobuster: http://www.isobuster.com/ Some related info: http://www.msfn.org/board/topic/172655-strange-or-odd-multi-or-single-boot-cddvd-el-torito-images/ and: http://reboot.pro/topic/20004-boot-a-acronis-true-image-2014-iso-image-with-grub2-at-uefi/ jaclaz
  21. Ahh, now I understand (maybe). You are talking of either Tab (tabulator) characters, the things that if you press the button with what appears as an ink botched reversed P: ¶ will appear as a right pointing arrow ->. Easier would be to remove all duplicate tabs. Go to search and replace, you want to search for ^t^t and replace that with ^t (this replaces any occurrence of two consecutive tabulator wìth one), run the replace several times until you find no more occurrences. OR you are talking of Tab stops, the thingies that go in a bar at the top of the document, they can be cleared as in here: https://support.office.com/en-us/article/Set-tab-stops-or-clear-them-06969e0f-2c81-4fe0-8df5-88f18087a8e0 http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/microsoft-office/how-do-i-delete-all-tab-stops-in-a-word-document/ jaclaz
  22. Which seemingly is very loosely "something of the kind", it looks like it scrubs not the "same" things. jaclaz
  23. Meanwhile ... http://www.theverge.com/2016/1/28/10864034/windows-phone-is-dead jaclaz
  24. Well, not according to the good MS guys. Their idea is that the OEM copy is licensed "together" and as "one piece" with the hardware, and it is expressly prohibited to transfer the license to a new hardware (with a few exceptions like substitution of a motherboard that failed - but only replacing it with an identical model, etc.), this is actually one of the reasons why they have the "voting system", the "validation", etc. The idea is/was that the OEM copy comes (came) at a lower price than a "full" version for two reasons: 1) the support is transferred to the OEM 2) the license is only valid on the attached hardware Same goes for the COA sticker, the idea is (was) that it CANNOT (once applied) be EVER detached from the piece of hardware it has been applied to, which makes some (little) sense when the hardware is a laptop (where normally the COA will soon be worn down and become unreadable anyway) and much less sense when the hardware is a desktop, and the COA is attached to the actual case (which more or less can "last forever"). jaclaz
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