Be sure to check drive letters by actually accessing the files that
you know are on them. If your system has an NTFS partition -- or ext2
or any other file system that FreeDOS can't read -- the drive letters
will be off.
For example, my drive C: is NTFS and D: is FAT32 (both on a hard
drive). When
On Sun, Feb 3, 2013 at 9:45 PM, Andrew Robins wrote:
>> The second PATH statement above will override the first, so Access
>> will work, but stuff in FDOS\BIN won't. To have more than one
>> directory in the PATH, use ; as the separator between directory names:
>>
>> PATH C:\XX;C:\FDOS\BIN
>
> Ah
Aha - thanks Dennis for the rescue (on yet another OS thread) - I must
have included an extra space after my semi-colon in previous
experiments. Cheers and kuDOS
> The second PATH statement above will override the first, so Access
> will work, but stuff in FDOS\BIN won't. To have more than one
>
On Sun, Feb 3, 2013 at 9:14 PM, Rugxulo wrote:
> On Feb 3, 2013 8:11 PM, "dmccunney" wrote:
>>
>> On Sun, Feb 3, 2013 at 11:59 AM, dos386 wrote:
>> >> detects,asm,basic,c,c
>> >
>> > Try INFOPAD from CC386 and FASM IDE :-)
>>
>> Alas, INFOPAD is a nice little editor with a multi-windowed Tur
Hi,
On Feb 3, 2013 8:11 PM, "dmccunney" wrote:
>
> On Sun, Feb 3, 2013 at 11:59 AM, dos386 wrote:
> >> detects,asm,basic,c,c
> >
> > Try INFOPAD from CC386 and FASM IDE :-)
>
> Alas, INFOPAD is a nice little editor with a multi-windowed Turbo
> Vision style interface, but in no way an IDE.
On Sun, Feb 3, 2013 at 11:59 AM, dos386 wrote:
>> detects,asm,basic,c,c
>
> Try INFOPAD from CC386 and FASM IDE :-)
Alas, INFOPAD is a nice little editor with a multi-windowed Turbo
Vision style interface, but in no way an IDE. And FASM IDE is a Win32
application.
__
Dennis
https://plus.
On Sun, Feb 3, 2013 at 8:13 PM, Andrew Robins wrote:
> Another noob question - I thought I had this working in my last install on
> the card, but doesn't gel here: How do I correctly 'set path' in autoexec to
> enable additional commands (like edit, format etc) in FDOS\BIN resident from
> any comm
cordata2 - I stand corrected, and absolutely flabbergasted. Pleasantly
surprised indeed - troubles with a dying floppy drive had me flip a
spare usb-floppy over to the test rig, and on reboot I tried "B:" and
bang - there was my usb-floppy! (Not asking me to swap the floppy in
the infernal A drive,
Thanks cordata2 and Mark - no I've tried repeated reboots while ironing
out the kinks in my re-install, chiefly to get my autoexec.bat working
nicely, and while the BIOS detects the USB flash drive on bootup, no
letter is automatically assigned to it (although I must test the ports
at the rear). US
Hi
News/Blog stuff is back ... but permissions are bugged ... I can't
edit it (shows me editing page, but after Submit, it asks for PWD
again).
Have you heard anything from King Udo recently? His forum is spammed
and dead :-(
-
> detects,asm,basic,c,c
Try INFOPAD from CC386 and FASM IDE :-)
--
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the program "rufus" (from rufus.akeo.ie)
is an excellent way to get a usb stick bootable...
eufdp...@yahoo.com
eufdp...@yahoo.com
eufdp...@yahoo.com
eufdp...@yahoo.com
eufdp...@yahoo.com
>---
My advice to anyone trying to use a USB storage device on FreeDOS is to first
try
using the BIOS.
First realize that USB drives will be FAT 16 for smaller devices (1G or less)
and FAT32 for
larger devices. So find a device which is small or make sure you are using
the FAT32 enabled
FreeDOS ke
PS. Begging pardon - the zip file I mentioned earlier was "USB19.zip"
from Jack Ellis and, I see from Bret Johnson's USB support forum, a
colourful debate there on UIDE/USB extensionality I am too dense to
fathom. Also - usbhosts showing 2 OHCI and 1 EHCI (2.0) usb ports,
matching the BIOS. I'm tes
I'm stumped I'm afraid - how do include the requisite instructions in
fdconfig.sys (and? autoexec.bat) to have USBUHCI and USBDRIVE resident
and functional in a fresh Freedos 1.1 install?
I'm in the process of constructing small DOS games environment on a 2Gb
sd-card drive (IDE adapter). The eventu
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