G
Guest
Guest
Archived from groups: microsoft.public.win2000.setup (More info?)
Here's the sad sorry story...
I was happily co-existing with NT4 Sp6a Workstation for about the last
4 years but then the wife bought a digital camera and as we all know
the USB is not supported by NT. I had an upgrade-to-Win2k CD that I
received when I purchased NT back in 1999/2000 so I installed or tried
to install) Win2K from that. After problems of not finding this and
that driver and not being able to read from my main CDROM unit and a
horrible experience of replacing my laboriously-downloaded IE6 with
IE5.4 (obviously they don't check!) I finally reached the blue screen
of death (several times) with "Fatal System Error...[blah blah]".
Great! Now what the f... do I do?
Well, my machine had a 466mhz processor and 128M of memory and no
possibility of upgrade and I'd seen these 2+ gig machines with gobs of
memory and other good things at a great price so... well, it's a good
excuse. I went out and bought one pre-loaded with Win XP Home.
Great, at least I have no installation worries now and the biggest
problem is re-installing my old software and trying to eliminate the
baby talk. But then disaster again struck in the form of a set of
programs written for MS-DOS 6.2 and used by myself daily which now
won't run under XP (they run fine under NT and Win2K). I'd understand
the punishment if these were game programs or similar frivolity but
they just manipulate text and massive indexed files. No direct machine
instructions: everything done through OS calls.
Well, I could kill XP and re-install NT4 and then SP6a and then the
Win2K upgrade but that's a huge amount of work and I'm now dealing
with a machine which is up to date and a version of the OS that is 4
years old. I would imagine that almost nothing on the machine has
drivers. Did they even have a DVD ROM back in those days? I'm sure
that Win2k SP4 has all that's necessary but getting there will be a
real problem.
Or I could install Win2K from scratch eliminating the NT4 and NT4 SP6a
dance but despite a menu item on the installation disk of "Install
Windows 2000 Professional" the outside of the CD is clearly marked
"Upgrade" so presumably it will check that there's at least something
of NT4 on the machine (anyone know what?).
Or maybe I should learn Linux <g>...
Does anyone have an views on what I should do?
Here's the sad sorry story...
I was happily co-existing with NT4 Sp6a Workstation for about the last
4 years but then the wife bought a digital camera and as we all know
the USB is not supported by NT. I had an upgrade-to-Win2k CD that I
received when I purchased NT back in 1999/2000 so I installed or tried
to install) Win2K from that. After problems of not finding this and
that driver and not being able to read from my main CDROM unit and a
horrible experience of replacing my laboriously-downloaded IE6 with
IE5.4 (obviously they don't check!) I finally reached the blue screen
of death (several times) with "Fatal System Error...[blah blah]".
Great! Now what the f... do I do?
Well, my machine had a 466mhz processor and 128M of memory and no
possibility of upgrade and I'd seen these 2+ gig machines with gobs of
memory and other good things at a great price so... well, it's a good
excuse. I went out and bought one pre-loaded with Win XP Home.
Great, at least I have no installation worries now and the biggest
problem is re-installing my old software and trying to eliminate the
baby talk. But then disaster again struck in the form of a set of
programs written for MS-DOS 6.2 and used by myself daily which now
won't run under XP (they run fine under NT and Win2K). I'd understand
the punishment if these were game programs or similar frivolity but
they just manipulate text and massive indexed files. No direct machine
instructions: everything done through OS calls.
Well, I could kill XP and re-install NT4 and then SP6a and then the
Win2K upgrade but that's a huge amount of work and I'm now dealing
with a machine which is up to date and a version of the OS that is 4
years old. I would imagine that almost nothing on the machine has
drivers. Did they even have a DVD ROM back in those days? I'm sure
that Win2k SP4 has all that's necessary but getting there will be a
real problem.
Or I could install Win2K from scratch eliminating the NT4 and NT4 SP6a
dance but despite a menu item on the installation disk of "Install
Windows 2000 Professional" the outside of the CD is clearly marked
"Upgrade" so presumably it will check that there's at least something
of NT4 on the machine (anyone know what?).
Or maybe I should learn Linux <g>...
Does anyone have an views on what I should do?