Posted on 09/06/2004 2:48:29 PM PDT by Computer Central
Hi - My PC clone has AMD-K6 & Win 98 SE
1. What changes do I have to make, (and how), to make my computer Boot from CD-ROM? I have a CD that has FreeSBIE / (FreeBSD) on it. When I am able to boot from the CD-ROM, then the FreeBSD is supposed to run the computer from the CD.
2. The ribbon cable that goes to the Hard Drive has that extra plastic connector in the middle of the cable. If I connect a 2nd hard drive to that extra connector, (also with the power connection), what else do I have to do to have two hard drives working together? Do I need a 'driver'? Do I need to go into setup? What might be the drive number or letter of this extra drive? ...Other steps..??
Note: I have three extra drives. I have been switching them around. Some work as C:\ - drive, and they all work as a D:\ Drive in place of the CD-ROM. I know how to connect the power connector & ribbon connector to make them work. I tried one of the drives in this 'extra' connector. It didn't work. I didn't take notes, but it was like the computer didn't 'see' it or 'read' it.
To get two drives to work together you must make sure that one is set as the "master" and the other the "slave" (not kidding!). This is usually a jumper setting. Typically the master is assigned the first drive letter.
If you want to boot from the "master" one day and the "slave" the next, you can easily change the boot order in the Setup (BIOS). IDE Drives (the kind you most likely are using) are assigned numbers 0-3, 0 being the first one (again not kidding. It is binary reasoning).
If you don't want to boot want to change the boot order in the BIOS there are ways to set-up multibooting on the main drive through software or clever installation techiques.
Another neat solution to multible Operating Systems is of course Virtual PC.
That is: If you don't want to change the boot order...
1.= Boot @ CD = *1.- (assuming your chipset supports it) = I guess I just try it, & see if it works..?? Any easy way to check the chipset, in setup..?? Thanks again.
1. What changes do I have to make, (and how), to make my computer Boot from CD-ROM? I have a CD that has FreeSBIE / (FreeBSD) on it. When I am able to boot from the CD-ROM, then the FreeBSD is supposed to run the computer from the CD.
2. The ribbon cable that goes to the Hard Drive has that extra plastic connector in the middle of the cable. If I connect a 2nd hard drive to that extra connector, (also with the power connection), what else do I have to do to have two hard drives working together? Do I need a 'driver'? Do I need to go into setup? What might be the drive number or letter of this extra drive? ...Other steps..??
Note: I have three extra drives. I have been switching them around. Some work as C:\ - drive, and they all work as a D:\ Drive in place of the CD-ROM. I know how to connect the power connector & ribbon connector to make them work. I tried one of the drives in this 'extra' connector. It didn't work. I didn't take notes, but it was like the computer didn't 'see' it or 'read' it.
___________________________________________________
first. change all hard disk jumpers to cable select
most main boards handle up to 4 ide's
install the one(s) you want in the order you want them...reboot
second. go into setup and set the order so that CD is first in order to start, hard drive second.
Then while in setup have setup autosearch your harddrives...when finsihed press F10 then Y.
Third. the CD should start your computer
For some reason, I had 5 multiple posts. They're deleted now.
Thanks for the info. Time to give it a try.
If you are a novice on Linux/Unix and wanting to learn it, I would suggest a book,"Sams Teach Yourself Red hat Linux....Fedora in 24 hours ...that includes CD's with Fedora Core1. It will build a running system on disk where you tell it to. And you can get pretty far in web browsing without working thru all of the commands.
#4 = bootable from a CD, =>> (assuming your chipset supports it) <<=
FYI I got into BIOS / Setup, - so far, it wont boot from the CD. Im getting a disk error
Previously, the CD drive has been working fine.
** =>> assuming your chipset supports it ** How do I know if my chipset supports it?
(In Setup, I looked at a section concerning the settings for the Chipset. Can I make any adjustments there?)
Thanks for any info.
= From July 2003 = First there are a couple of computer links; and next there is some humor and inspiration quotes; and last several FReepers listing their computer related skills and interests, that could be use to organize a FR computer help. optimistically_conservative = For Computer Chat here on FR, try this Link: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/t-computers/browse For Computer Help, Click Link: Computing.Net (an excerpt from a recent FR computer help thread...) Think millions of people downloading "free" stuff at the same time...
Contrary to mindless assumption, the internet is finite. 5 posted on 06/11/2007 9:31:34 AM PDT by Publius6961 (MSM: Israelis are killed by rockets; Lebanese are killed by Israelis.)
![]() 6 posted on 06/11/2007 9:59:04 AM PDT by JRios1968 (Faith is not believing that God can. It is knowing that God will. - Ben Stein) ("Everything is either willed or permitted by God, and nothing can hurt me." Bl. Charles de Foucauld) by Tax-chick ...just saw this sign in someone's living room: (something like...) "Faith: makes it possible, not easy". To: Rodney Dangerfield
Its ironic, but every Atheist I know believes in Ghosts, UFOs, Karma
"When people stop believing in God, they don't believe in nothing - they believe in anything." 26 posted on Tuesday, December 09, 2008 2:55:12 PM by SkyPilot
(Adversity in life and death is inevitable. Thru faith in Christ, stress is optional.) by Cvengr
89 posted on December 09, 2008 Man who lost family when jet hit house: Pray for pilot http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2145932/posts ![]() 7 posted on 06/11/2007 11:04:26 AM PDT by martin_fierro (< |:)~)
To: martin_fierro
LOL!! I am still unable to download the latest definitions as I keep getting these server busy messages. Gee, I thought everything was easier with high speed internet. Not!! Computer help info from my page: = From July 2003 = (needs to be updated / revised ~ 3-07) Let me know if you need help stripping out names and such. A ton of ways to do it (like save the source and grep/sed/awk) or a full fledge perl script to navigate to the page(s) and do all the work from start to finish. I am going to be wrapped up most of this week (my long work week, 5 nights of 12a-12p) but I usually spend most my nights at work either freeping or studying (the servers run fairly well there, out of 400+ I only avg 1-2 down ones a week). If you're running windows on a desktop look into cygwin sometime, pretty slick (Cygwin is a Linux-like environment for Windows) Lets you do grep/sed/awk/etc and so on (better than using MS's toolkit for unix, on which I have posted articles previously). There are a zillion things out there, and it is good to see so many people here with varied experience and knowledge. I have a lot of gaps, good to see them filled in! :) - by chance33_98 = = = Publius6961 = Funny you should post this. I am about to go cable and wireless and would love input from others who have done it already. What are the caveats and pitfalls? Are some router companies more reliable than others? Is it possible to have a wireless LAN/Internet setup? So many questions... so little time (...July2003) = = = To: Publius6961 = What are the caveats and pitfalls? Wireless claims of range (300 ft., etc.) are bogus. With luck you'll get 75 feet. Encryption shortens the range, and believe it or not, can cause laptop wireless cards to overheat and shut down. If you aren't doing anything illegal, you might skip wireless encryption and set your access points up to talk only to each other. This is done by specifying the MAC addresses they will talk to. This function will probably require searching through all the menu choices during setup, since it is seldom well documented. - by js1138 = = = Xthe17th = While we're on the subject of old computers, I hear that Rotary Club sponsors some sort of program that collects and refurbishes old computer equipment/software for schools/the needy. Being that I have a closet-full of one of each (Tandy, 286, 386SX, 486, early Pentiums, laptops, monitors, drives, disks, manuals, etc., etc) just collecting dust and taking up space, I'd like to know. Hey, they're good for simple games and the 386 on ups work for light typing and spreadsheet use. I even used to do AutoCad and engineering work on the later models. FUND-RAISING IDEA: Perhaps we can assemble our own list of old FReeper equipment and sell it for cash - proceeds half to FR and half to charity? We'll need to also put together a volunteer list of aplicable tech skills. LMK,... To: Xthe17th = Our local schools have very strict standards on donated PC's because of maintenance costs. They don't want to become a dumping ground for old computers and spend lots of money trying to keep them running. It costs less than $300 to build a good computer so resale values aren't very good on old ones. by AppyPappy To: AppyPappy = Yep, but the oldies are good for young kids to play with. A good learning experience. Probably learn more just trying to repair them... a cheap technical indoctrination, IMHO. (learn about electronics, basic computer structure, can open up drives/floppies to study mechanisms, etc.) Somewhere around here I have an old 8088 chip cut-open and encased in clear lucite. Nick Danger = (DOS History) | ThePythonicCow = (DOS Downloads) | JoeSixPack1 = ?? DOS, etc. (Other names on original thread): [Above Info From July 2003] |
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