
- MS DOS 6.22 ISO USB HOW TO
- MS DOS 6.22 ISO USB INSTALL
- MS DOS 6.22 ISO USB DRIVER
- MS DOS 6.22 ISO USB MODS
- MS DOS 6.22 ISO USB ISO
MS DOS 6.22 ISO USB INSTALL
I have many years of computer experience, and I would not attempt it - not without some real expert assistance, a lot of web-searching (Google is my friend), and a lot of soul searching.īetter, if you suspect that your BIOS is affected, just get the latest version for your motherboard/BIOS from the supplier, and install that. Sure, there are ways to change the BIOS, and still come back with a compliant result, but I would guess you are not up to it. By simply changing some string, value, any character or code, in the BIOS will result with that error. They will do a quick CRC or sum-check of the BIOS contents and any deviation of the results, not comparing against some also contained value, will result in a failure to start, with a resulting (usually beeping) error code. Most BIOS routines, in any modern computer, have self-tests (called POST, Power On Self Tests), and one of the first things they do is to check the validity of their own code.
MS DOS 6.22 ISO USB HOW TO
How would you, a self-admitted un-experienced person, know what and how to edit it. You are assuming that if you can edit the BIOS you can remove some supposed viral string (?) that is contained in.
MS DOS 6.22 ISO USB MODS
Mods may wish to weigh in on this one, but no bad on the OP since he mentioned it and now we know something new.Įb001 I believe you are going about this all wrong. Being able to edit it out of BIOS would facilitate easy reselling of stolen machines. Of course disabling Computrace is like cracking passwords, because it is an antitheft feature. Thanks for mentioning the connection between rpcnetp and Phoenix BIOS. I started typing this response before OP posted his latest. Here's a good beginner tutorial with screenshots you could print if that serves you: There is much Knoppix documentation on the net. Boot it and you can do everything from explore your Windows box to surf the net without a hard disk. iso, burn it (always at slowest burn speed) and you can boot to a nice GUI requiring no Unix knowledge.
MS DOS 6.22 ISO USB ISO
iso he can burn something superior that will let him do things easily. isos (he used UltraIso successfully) so if he can burn a DOS. The DOS CD is therefore a distraction because DOS is so obsolete it is crippled by comparison. There is much that a DOS boot CD will not do, much that others will, and they are as easy to download, burn and boot. It could be an XP box with SATA drive like some recent Dells that a DOS CD is useless on. The Original Poster specified nothing about his system.
MS DOS 6.22 ISO USB DRIVER
The suggestion for using a more advanced liveCD was to make things easier than hassling with command-line navigation in DOS, NTFS support, and driver support.

Well, I still havent been able to find a BIOS editor that works with my Phoenix BIOS, so I have been unsuccessful so far. I found out that it is built into the BIOS and the only way to delete it is to edit the BIOS, find and release the OEM string that it is contained in. Ok, why do I want to edit my BIOS? Because I have been searching for weeks on how to get rid of a certain undesirable Computrace process called "rcpnetp" which seems to regenerate itself even if you delete the. I found Phoenix BIOS Editor and got a copy but when I try to open the BIOS file, I get a "Wrong BCPSYS version!" error and it wont open. Unfortunately it only works with Award and I have a Phoenix BIOS. It didn't work.Ĭbrom is a BIOS editing program. or do you know that already?Īctually, the reason I wanted to access the hard drive from a DOS boot cd is because I was trying to see if cbrom would run in pure DOS, because it would freeze in the XP command prompt. Not just to gain NTFS readability, but perhaps even to determine what the file system is on your hard drive. Tell us which boot CD you are using, and someone here can give you more direct instructions. There are other boot CD's that also can read NTFS, but you may need to select an option, while booting, to pick up that ability. If you are using a boot CD - such as MadBoot, that has the ability to see, and read, NTFS. If you are booting up with MS-DOS, it (by itself) can not read - or see - NTFS. Like Frank4d mentioned, if your hard drive is formatted with NTFS (which, more than likely, is your file system) on that hard drive will depend upon your OS'es ability to read NTFS. Whether or not you are able to see the usual, and expected, hard drives would be dependent upon whether or not that OS can read the file system on your hard drive.

Any system that allows you to operate some commands, by definition, is an operating system. A boot CD may be loading MS-DOS, which is an operating system (it is not GUI, by default, but it is an OS).
