User | Post |
neotransotaku
Posts: 1489/4016 |
What, DOS does that? I never knew that I should try that sometime... |
FreeDOS
Posts: 775/1657 |
Actually, DOS assigns the floppy drive to both A: and B: if there is only one drive. |
Boom.dk
Posts: 142/392 |
I will just erase my partition! Mwah! |
neotransotaku
Posts: 1486/4016 |
Originally posted by Kieran I was thinking of the Windows 98 CD... And without DOS please. (Got no FAT partitions )
oh, then it seems you are out of luck unless you have a B: drive. Unless you some how make your computer use the only floppy you have use B: (that requires going through BIOS). If you get your computer set floppy to B: then once getting to DOS prompt, sys a: b: will make the floppy bootable and then copy command should allow you to copy some files from a: to b: |
HyperLamer
Posts: 1742/8210 |
Use a boot disk, it's FAT. Or Google XMSDisk, a nice RAMDisk creator program. I use it for DOS recovery often. Combined with NTFSDOS you can copy the files to your HD, if you can afford it or find a copy. |
Boom.dk
Posts: 141/392 |
I was thinking of the Windows 98 CD... And without DOS please. (Got no FAT partitions ) |
neotransotaku
Posts: 1485/4016 |
It depends on the CD. But if you can boot up using the CD and find your way to the prompt. Then you can copy stuff with the following commands (provided the CD actually takes over A: and the bootable CD is MS-DOS derivative). If you are using a unix derived OS, then I can provide the commands for that.
> C: > cd\ > mkdir temp > cd temp > copy a:\*.*
each '>' is where you can input a command.
|
Boom.dk
Posts: 135/392 |
How can I get the boot information / files from a bootable CD? |