Rumor has it that Vintage Computer Festival may have mentioned these words:
On Sat, 23 Oct 2004, Gooijen H wrote:
A short update on my efforts ...
The Fujitsu-OnRack version did what was to be expected: it checks and
sees that there is no Fujitsu drive in the PC and stops :-)
Sorry to say that the version from Pete is for Western Digital drives
and shows the same behaviour :-(
I found a gfew manufacturer versions, but not for HP &%$#@!&
However, there is till hope at 2 fronts: the version Dave will dig up,
and there is one on auction at eBay (for just a few $$). If I will be
the lucky winner I will share the data on the disk with everybody that
is interested in a copy. It looks like this is an *original* OnTrack
version that works with drives of any manufacturer. It's version 7 ...
I'll report back later.
Maybe this is a dumb suggestion, in which case I invite folks to throw
pies at me while I'm stripped down nekkid (note: I might like it),
If you're talking Lemon Meringue fresh outta the oven, I doubt you'd like
it (well, not for *long*, anyway! :-O )...
... but
what about using a boot manager instead? Would it not accomplish the same
thing?
Noper, two totally different critters.
Boot managers just *replaces* the standard MBR with a customizable MBR so
you can boot multiple OSs. It has nothing to do WRT disk geometry or sizes.
Linux's Grub is a good example. (LILO can do it too, but it's a little less
forgiving of other operating systems.) Even Winders NT/2K/XP boot manager
can be twiddled enough to boot Linux, tho it's *not* easy to do. Individual
partitions are easily accessible from other OSs as the geometry is still
derived from the BIOS/HD itself.
OTOH, OnTrack (and others) actually "off-shift" the MBR and add a
"pre-loader" which adds a BIOS patch to give the BIOS the ability to
recognize larger HDs, or HDs with odd geometries. Then once it loads, the
off-shifted MBR is then called and the computer can boot normally. If this
BIOS patch is *not* loaded first, then the computer cannot accurately
recognize the HD geometry, partition sizes or locations, etc.
On the plus side, it's *very* handy every time an idiot PeeCee manufacturer
decides to hard-code YADAHDL (that's "Yet Another DumbAss Hard Drive
Limitation... ;-) -- First 32Meg, then 528 Meg, then 2Gig, then 8 Gig, then
80Gig, then 127Gig, and I'm sure there's others in between I've forgotten.
This code allows a computer with a 528-Meg BIOS limitation (or older
computer who's BIOS doesn't have customizable entries) to utilize larger HDs.
On the minus side - He who uses this software had better take care on
having a good backup plan in place that does not require this software! As
the geometry's been "jumbled" to make it work in that environment, if you
yank the drive & put it in another machine, the partitions won't be
recognized or anything. With OnTrack and some others, you *could* set up a
boot floppy with the special code so another machine (if booted from this
floppy) could read the partitions & whatnot, but guaranteed, as soon as you
need that floppy, you won't be able to find it... ;-)
Hope this helps,
Roger "Merch" Merchberger
So what kinda pie do you want, Sellam? ;^>
--
Roger "Merch" Merchberger | A new truth in advertising slogan
sysadmin, Iceberg Computers | for MicroSoft: "We're not the oxy...
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