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| Thread ID: 74851 | 2006-12-07 13:03:00 | Accessing older files | B.M. (505) | Press F1 |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 504892 | 2006-12-07 13:03:00 | Ok guys and gals, curly question time . :D A mate owns two computers, one is an old Win 98, now deceased (leaky MB capacitors) and the other a shiny new XP machine . Now the old one contained a lot of important, business related files, created by one of those early, probably DOS based, accounting programmes . In an endeavour to help I removed the HDD from the old machine and slaved it in the new machine . Word, XL and picture files all work fine, but the all important accounting programme doesnt . Naturally, he cant remember where the disks are for the accounting programme but I dont think it matters too much as I doubt they would load on the new XP machine anyway . Question is, what is the accepted practise in a situation like this? The slaved HDD still has the Win98 OS on it, so is there some way to boot from here when he needs to access this accountancy programme . He retires after Christmas so doesnt want to go to a lot of trouble and expense with new accounting programmes and transferring all the data, assuming that is possible . Any suggestions would be appreciated . :thumbs: |
B.M. (505) | ||
| 504893 | 2006-12-07 13:37:00 | Can you clarify the exact question? For me, usually any query that involves three reads to try and understand goes into file 13. | Greg (193) | ||
| 504894 | 2006-12-07 17:22:00 | One approach would be to put the HDD in another W98 box They are about for next to nothing. |
kjaada (253) | ||
| 504895 | 2006-12-07 17:51:00 | Can you clarify the exact question? For me, usually any query that involves three reads to try and understand goes into file 13. A pass in "NCEA" comprehension was it Greg? :D |
B.M. (505) | ||
| 504896 | 2006-12-07 17:52:00 | One approach would be to put the HDD in another W98 box They are about for next to nothing. Yep, got that down as a last resort. :thumbs: |
B.M. (505) | ||
| 504897 | 2006-12-07 19:17:00 | Another idea might be a new partition with W98 on it | kjaada (253) | ||
| 504898 | 2006-12-07 19:28:00 | I guess technically by having a seperate HDD with Win98 on it we have virtually the same thing? Maybe I'm looking at dual booting? :cool: I'm "Googleing" at the moment to see what dual booting is all about . :confused: |
B.M. (505) | ||
| 504899 | 2006-12-07 19:40:00 | What happens when he tries to run the accounting program? Have you tried running it in compatibility mode? Is it a Win9.x program or a DOS program? If DOS, then you could use DOSBox to run it. |
pctek (84) | ||
| 504900 | 2006-12-07 19:52:00 | There is a dos command (something like) DIR C/: ,where C is the disk that you are searching and you can see everything on the disk.Also a fair few accounting systems were still on Lotus 123 back then. | kjaada (253) | ||
| 504901 | 2006-12-07 20:01:00 | What happens when he tries to run the accounting program? Have you tried running it in compatibility mode? Is it a Win9 . x program or a DOS program? If DOS, then you could use DOSBox to run it . Trying to run the programme produces "Can't find Data files" or similar . As for it being Win9 . x or DOS I don't know, nor do I know how to tell . :blush: "Googling" leaves me thinking a Boot Manager is what is required? That way he could boot to XP by default or boot to Win98 if he wanted to use the accounting programme . Anyone any thoughts or recommendations on this possibility? |
B.M. (505) | ||
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