On Sat, Dec 13, 1997 at 01:39:05AM +0100, Gertjan Klein wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > [snip - BIOS and large HDs]
> Take your pick. What many people seem to be confused about is that > many, if not most, decisions concerning this stuff are driven by > market forces requiring backward compatibility. Let me state _again_ > that the BIOS is nothing but a piece of software in a PROM - it can > easily be altered should the market so request. The design of the PC > is flexible enough here. I'm not sure that replacing a chip is entirely flexible, althought modern Flash BIOS overcome this (yes, I saw the P in PROM). > > As I understand it, (at least with DOS/windows/OS2), you can only "see" one > > primary partition _per disk_. This was also what various HOWTO's seemed to > > say. > > No, no, NO! How many times do I have to say this: I HAVE MULTIPLE > PRIMARY DOS PARTITIONS, AND BOTH DOS AND WINDOWS '95 SEE ALL OF THEM! > What does it take to convince you that I'm not lying?! Do I need to > mail an output of DOS fdisk perhaps? Or would you then think I forged > that? <Taking a deep breath> The only problem with multiple primary > DOS partitions that both DOS and W95 have, is that their fdisk refuses > to create more than one. For a workaround, and more details, see the > docs of my boot manager (see sig). Once created, they are seen and > accesible. I stand corrected, I thought maybe you had one primary parition on one disk and one on another - I never meant to imply you were lying. MS fdisk is badly broken - I've some very strange results from it. > > The fact that windows (95 and NT) cannot use partitions properly - they > > *require* that they are on the first primary partition on a disk - means > > that partitioning is _alot_ of hard work (trust me - I've spent a week > > reinstalling things and messing around). > > I doubt if you've spend as much time partitioning as I have developing > my boot manager ;-) I have very little experience with NT, but I know > for a fact that Windows '95 does _not_ require to be installed to the > first primary partition of a harddisk - on my harddisk, it is installed > on the fourth. The requirements are: > > - It must be installed on the first harddisk. This requirement goes > for both DOS and W95; for DOS 6.22 and 7.0 (the DOS part of W95) there > is a workaround if there are no primary DOS partitions on the first > harddisk. > > - The active flag must be set to the booted partition. If W95 is > booted from the fourth partition, but the active flag is set to the > first, it will hang. Is it possible to boot 95 from a logical partition? On a seperate note, is it possible to *install* (from CD) 95 onto a logical HD. One thing that I'll mention, HPFS (OS/2) and NTFS (NT) both use the same ID for their paritions. If you try to install NT onto a disk where there is an HPFS partition "before" the one that you are going to install NT on, it gets confused ("it's an NT ID, but I can't read it - aaarrgh")? I'm sure of this, but it seemed to be what happened on someone's machine at work (I didn't have this problem and did have OS/2 installed). > > One feature I look for in a design is easy modification in the future > > (which is normally always needed for one reason or another). > > The PC having come this far, I'd say it apparently was modifyable > enough to give us Pentium PCs without losing the ability to run DOS. > Your list of things you object to is not exhaustive, and some of it I > agree with; I am not defending everything to do with PCs, I just hate to > see misinformation - especially on a list otherwise so helpful and > accurate. I can run a spectrum emulator on my PC, but that certainly wasn't designed to be easily modifiable. In a similar way, if the PC was better designed in the first place, they would be much faster now as the backwards compatibility would come at a much lower cost than we are currently paying. > > - allowing spaces in filename - *completely* *braindead* > > kilu:~$ > "Filename with spaces" > kilu:~$ ls > Filename with spaces > > I assume you are now going to tell me that the Linux "design" is > completely braindead too? Or perhaps different rules apply to operating > systems you like than to operating systems you don't like? Oops - I knew this too! More anti-MS than anti-PC, but at least most people using unix don't actually use any strange characters in filenames; unlike 95 which has "Program Files", the default short form of this is progra~1. Unfortunately MS has seen fit to hard-code "progra~1" into their installation for other programs (excel and word IIRC) which b*****s things up if you've changed the registry to give better short names like "programf". Backwards-compatibility is a pet hate of mine. If we all used DEC alphas, we would have far faster machines capable of running legacy applications faster than "modern" PCs (e.g. Alphas can emulate Pentiums *very quickly*). Adrian email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] | Debian Linux - www.debian.org http://www.poboxes.com/adrian.bridgett | Because bloated, unstable PGP key available on public key servers | operating systems are from MS -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .