With Windows-98, and I believe Windows-95 as well, there is a FAR EASIER WAY to
boot
directly to a DOS prompt than using either of the methods I've seen documented
here.
[What I'm about to describe is also documented under Win98 (probably also 95) by
clicking on START..HELP, search for "ms-dos," select "to start your computer
without
starting Windows." Follow the instructions.]
It takes two keystrokes at boot-up, one of them timing dependent.
Restart your computer, either a restart or a full power-on. It doesn't matter
whether the computer was off or whether you do a START..SHUTDOWN followed by a
Power
off or Restart. Just get the computer rebooting.
While it's booting wait for the beep and then *immediately* HIT and HOLD the
CTRL
key. On some computers the same thing works if you HIT and HOLD F8.
You will then immediately be confronted with an DOS-like screen of options.
Select
option 5, "Command Prompt Only." The system will do its thing with AUTOEXECs
and the
like and leave you in full-screen DOS mode without doing the additional
processing to
bring up Windows. For the duration of this boot-up you're stuck with DOS,
which I
presume is what several posters here want!
So, for two key presses (CTRL and 5) you've got a DOS bootup. It's fast and
involves
absolutely no system changes.
The next time you reboot, unless you do it again, you will boot up Windows
normally.
There's nothing to un-do to go back to a normal Windows system, other than
reboot.
73,
Gary W2CS
Apex, NC
> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-trlog@contesting.com [mailto:owner-trlog@contesting.com]On
> Behalf Of Francis Flynn
> Sent: Wednesday, January 26, 2000 8:57 PM
> To: Bob Wolbert, K6XX; TR Log
> Subject: Re: [TRLog] TRLog & Windows98
>
>
>
> Even with windows 98, you can have your machine boot to good old familiar DOS
> prompt.
>
> Edit the msdos.sys file, which in windows 95 or 98 isn't really a sys file
> like
> it was back in
> DOS 6.22 and before days, it's really an ascii text file.
>
> To edit this you first have to change the file's attributes by using the
> attrib
> command like this:
>
> attrib c:\msdos.sys -r -a -s -h
>
<<SNIP>>
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