Hi Tree and Doc: What's happening with the manual revision and a possible new version of TR? The suspense is killing me... :-) 73, Mark, KD4D _______________________________________________ Trlog mai
Hi all: Thought someone else might be interested in this thread... Pete: I assume the computer in question is running XP? If it's running an older OS, C: may be the Windows directory. Of course, if y
Hi Pete: Great. I also have DOS on a USB stick and it works on both of my new computers that I have tested! Kinda neat. I'm working on documenting the procedure to create a bootable DOS CD that will
Hi Joe: There are two potential gotchas with this approach. 1. It is darned near impossible to install the boot code to the flash device under Windows, AFAIK (As Far As I Know). The device is unlikel
Hi Mark: Do they have ISA slots? If not, I have had very good success with the two-port cards from ByteRunner with their DOS drivers that basically fake the IRQ and COM addresses. I see no reason why
Hello Doug: This MAY not work with a "normal" laptop computer. The issue is whether the BIOS will recognize the device and boot from it. I've used these at work to boot various VME boards and PC-104
Hi David: The new TR version is going to be IRQ-aware. I believe Tree indicated that he would support shared IRQ's. CT, for instance, doesn't. Tree, do I remember that correctly? I hope so! :-) 73, M
Good day, all: Thanks to everyone who looked at and made comments on my dual-boot procedure for Windows XP and DOS. So far, three people have successfully managed to dual-boot XP and DOS, one was not
Good day, all: Thanks to everyone who looked at and made comments on my dual-boot procedure for Windows XP and DOS. So far, three people have successfully managed to dual-boot XP and DOS, one was not
Hi Dave: The ByteRunner cards make it pretty easy to run them under DOS. I have no experience with them under a DOS window under Windows98SE. I would be very interested in hearing from anyone who has
Hi Dick: Most of the USB sticks come pre-formatted. My two were FAT16. You can just plug them in, boot DOS, and do a "SYS C:" or whatever to get DOS loaded. Just make sure you "SYS" the correct drive
Hi Dick: What you're doing will work just fine. What do you need for checking your homework? Making the drive bootable requires being able to do a "FORMAT/SYS" or a "SYS" command from DOS or some sor
Hi Dick: Regular COM ports and LPT ports will work just fine (the built-in ones). The ByteRunner PCI cards with their DOS drivers will work fine. USB adapters for COM and LPT ports won't AFAIK (As Fa
Good day, all: As part of my efforts to learn how to dual-boot DOS and Windows XP, I have figured out how to create bootable DOS CD's under Windows. This would be necessary to install DOS on a comput
Hello, all: In discussions with Rich, it seems it might be useful to have TR do this...pause between elements of the SS exchange and send "AS" on the inactive radio. I believe this should be done IF
Hi Riki: I have had the same problem with USB devices that are just too slow. Has anyone tried this with a USB 2.0 USB memory stick and interface and gotten good performance? 73, Mark, KD4D _________
Hi all: Anybody seen a problem running TR-Log on a fast computer? 73, Mark The version of DOS that came with Windows 98SE had lots of improvements...including the ability to handle disk partitions of
I should have been more specific. I'm not having this problem and I've successfully run it on several machines in the 1.6-1.9KHz class. The report is problems on a brand new, about 3.2KHz machine...
on a fast machine. I wonder if it's disk size/geometry. That one said DR DOS 7. something fixed it. Try the version from Windows 98SE to see if it works. You can get it from www.bootdisk.com. Do you
Hi BP: You may want to try installing that version of DOS, and its support files, on the hard drive rather than 6.22. Let us know if that also works. I haven't had any trouble on these machines. This