Thanks all for your replies.
Shriramana.
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Hi Nick:
Well, the product is a floppy disk image file which people can download
and either copy to a real floppy, use in a virtual machine, or use
to create a bootable CD. You would need to boot a version of
FreeDOS with the kernel and command.com that you want to use,
and use the "SYS" command
This is interesting. I've been waiting for the 1.0 Floppies to come out for
a very long time now. I'm not very experienced with such things, but I would
be glad to put a floppy distro together if someone gave me some advice.
Exactly how would I go about doing that?
On 12/20/06, Eric Auer <[EMAIL
Eric Auer wrote:
> To clarify: Wattcp and Watt/32 IS a tcp/ip stack, but you
> do not INSTALL it. Instead, programs contain wattcp as part
> of their binary. All Wattcp does use the same wattcp.cfg
To clarify again: At least older versions around 1991/92 were available
as TSRs too.
Robert Riebis
> of Linux or Windows. This means that for example you have
> to wait until your app gets a new DHCP lease every time
> when you start it, because no central networking driver
> of the operating system would be around to cache that.
IIRC watt-32 (not sure about wattcp) caches this info in file
%T
To clarify: Wattcp and Watt/32 IS a tcp/ip stack, but you
do not INSTALL it. Instead, programs contain wattcp as part
of their binary. All Wattcp does use the same wattcp.cfg
file, though :-). Note that DOS has no tcp/ip stuff in the
operating system that could be compared to the tcp/ip stuff
of L
For English speakers
***
Hi. This is Emanuele Cipolla (also known as GS Defender). I've been a DOS
addict and user since my early days (I'm now 19 years old), and a FreeDOS
user since Beta 4. Nowadays, I'm primarily a GNU/Linux user (and wanna-be
developer), but I have never f