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Date: | Thu, 7 Dec 2000 19:15:45 -0500 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
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Harlen:
It is possible to install an upgrade version of Win95 to a fresh disk.
(It's been a while since I've done it, so I may have forgotten the
details.) When the setup program starts, it searches the system for an
existing Microsoft operating system. If it can't find one, it asks for
the boot disk from an earlier MS system such as Windows 3.x. Once it has
verified that this is a legitimate upgrade, it installs the new version.
Best regards,
Carroll Grigsby
Harlen Linke wrote:
>
> At 04:47 PM 12/6/00 -0600, you wrote:
> >Last night I screwed up big time , I reformatted my hard drive(c),
>
> I believe there is a very good article in the FAQ's at the No Spin web site at:
>
> http://nospin.com/pc/faqs0005.html on setting up hard drives, and
>
> http://nospin.com/pc/pcb_win95.html installing windows 95
>
> I hope you have a New Machine Install version of windows95, as I don't
> think you can start from scratch with an upgrade disk.
>
> There are also generic drivers for your cdrom at the site, as well as a
> "boot disk" making program to get you started with cdrom support at:
>
> http://nospin.com/bootdisk/index.html website, or
>
> http://nospin.com/bootdisk/win95_osr2.exe the actual file for downloading.
>
> I imagine that your hard drives are both set to master, ( the new drive is
> usually defaulted to master or single) and your old drive WAS your bootup
> drive, so it had to be master. Set the newer drive to master and the old
> one to slave on the same cable. Save the other ide cable for the cdrom drive.
>
> Harlen Linke
>
> Do you want to signoff PCBUILD or just change to
> Digest mode - visit our web site:
> http://nospin.com/pc/pcbuild.html
Do you want to signoff PCBUILD or just change to
Digest mode - visit our web site:
http://nospin.com/pc/pcbuild.html
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