On 02/06/2018 12:58 PM, Terry Stewart via cctalk wrote:
The title might suggest to topic is not vintage, but
the reason I did
this myself was to facilitate classic computer disk imaging.
I'd think that something from ~20 years ago is indeed vintage. (It's
closer to the 25 year old requirement for cards to be vintage, than
not.) Just not quite as vintage as some of the other topics on cctalk.
I?ve recently given USB drive capability to the MS-DOS
7.1 environment
in a Windows 98SE computer I use for the purpose above. It was a bit of
work configuring the machine to ensure both the MS-DOS drivers and the
Windows 98SE drivers co-existed peacefully.
Intriguing.
I figured that such was possible, but I've never tried.
I'm no Windows 98 guru (or MS-DOS guru for that
matter) so it may not
be the most efficient or elegant of solutions. However, it worked for
me. That being the case I thought I?d document what I did.
I thought there were alternate config.sys and autoexec.bat files that
were used if you chose to reboot to MS-DOS mode, and possibly if you hit
F8 and chose command line during boot.
Quick Google searches make me think that the MS-DOS mode files are named
config.dos and autoexec.dos. Then Windows will rename them when you
select reboot into MS-DOS mode.
Thank you for sharing.
I'm filing that away for future use.
--
Grant. . . .
unix || die