Hello everybody.
I couldn't find a better place to post this, so I figured that the Win2K area should be populated by network experts, and here I am explaining you my problem.
I have two older laptops, those thin ones that come only with a built-in floppy drive and an external cd drive (PCMCIA)... well, I formatted the heck out of the two, and I wanted to install a light OS like win98se on both (166mmx and 233mmx, good enough for basics).
My problem is that (as expected) the win98 boot disk can't recognize the pcmcia cd drive, because the pcmcia port uses 32-bit drivers which are not loadable under dos (correct me if I am wrong here).
Bios has been already checked out, no option available...
So guess what? Once I boot into dos from the win98 floppy disk, the only way to exchange data is thru floppy.
I need an idea on how to transfer the .cab files of the win installation folder into a folder of the laptop hdd, and then launch the setup from there... everything is to be done UNDER DOS.
I thought of doing that thru network under dos, and if that is possible please let me know where can I find any sort of NetWork boot disk that enables TCP/IP or any other protocol that I could configure on my other desktop computer for the transfer... what leaves me doubtful is that the NIC is not built in, which means that the same PCMCIA problem that I had with the CD-drive will most likely arise again...
Finally I remembered when I used to connect my friend's computer to mine to play Doom 2 (the first lan parties ;o) - about 7 years ago...) with serial cable... I could use one of those - or better a parallel cable - and connect the two under dos using a determined software... I remember using a program called "LapLink" under dos for transfers, but is that still available? Let me rephrase the question: Is that the best idea? And which software should I use to transfer the files between the two using a Parallel pc-2-pc transfer cable?
Thank you in advance for any answer,
best regards,
Treppiede
A television may insult your intelligence but nothing rubs it in
like a computer.
I couldn't find a better place to post this, so I figured that the Win2K area should be populated by network experts, and here I am explaining you my problem.
I have two older laptops, those thin ones that come only with a built-in floppy drive and an external cd drive (PCMCIA)... well, I formatted the heck out of the two, and I wanted to install a light OS like win98se on both (166mmx and 233mmx, good enough for basics).
My problem is that (as expected) the win98 boot disk can't recognize the pcmcia cd drive, because the pcmcia port uses 32-bit drivers which are not loadable under dos (correct me if I am wrong here).
Bios has been already checked out, no option available...
So guess what? Once I boot into dos from the win98 floppy disk, the only way to exchange data is thru floppy.
I need an idea on how to transfer the .cab files of the win installation folder into a folder of the laptop hdd, and then launch the setup from there... everything is to be done UNDER DOS.
I thought of doing that thru network under dos, and if that is possible please let me know where can I find any sort of NetWork boot disk that enables TCP/IP or any other protocol that I could configure on my other desktop computer for the transfer... what leaves me doubtful is that the NIC is not built in, which means that the same PCMCIA problem that I had with the CD-drive will most likely arise again...
Finally I remembered when I used to connect my friend's computer to mine to play Doom 2 (the first lan parties ;o) - about 7 years ago...) with serial cable... I could use one of those - or better a parallel cable - and connect the two under dos using a determined software... I remember using a program called "LapLink" under dos for transfers, but is that still available? Let me rephrase the question: Is that the best idea? And which software should I use to transfer the files between the two using a Parallel pc-2-pc transfer cable?
Thank you in advance for any answer,
best regards,
Treppiede
A television may insult your intelligence but nothing rubs it in
like a computer.