First post, by Harry Potter
Hi! I have a DOS laptop at my mother's house. It was missing for years but found a few months ago. It had no hard drive, so I had to run through loops to get it to work, including a network to a Win98SE system, two large RAM drives and two Zip disks to act as simulated hard drives. I liked doing it, but it made the computer very hard to use. 🙁 I have a new hard drive for it and only recently tried to install it. Unfortunately, somebody here said it needs a caddy, as I was unable to install it properly. Once the drive is installed, I may be able to copy all that data to its hard drive, but I need to find the old Win98SE system and extract the network stuff from it, including stuff I had installed on a RAM drive, as the Zip disk that contained it broke, and I trashed it before I learned I could solve the Click-of-Death issue with a program on-line. After all this, I won't need the network anymore, but it might be fun to add CD support through a network. Now for the main question: I'v been using NSLAN to do the network, but, while it works well, it can only run in DOS mode. Is there a way to network the DOS laptop to Windows 98SE in native mode? I was using a null-modem serial connection for the network.
Joseph Rose, a.k.a. Harry Potter
Working magic in the computer community