On Tue, 1 Jan 2008 10:47:02 -0800 (PST), Doc
<> wrote:
>On Jan 1, 12:39*pm, "Robert E. Watts" <no_...@nowhere.com> wrote:
>
>> You can load any version of Win95 or 98 that you want to. You don't HAVE to
>> install a PB version. You will however have to track down any driver that
>> you many need for your PB, but that is always a lot of fun ! It's quite
>> doable.
>>
>> Matter of fact, if you install Win98SE, it will quite likely have all the
>> drivers already.
>
>
>The thing is, the interface on the PB has a special look, as I recall
>it was a room full of icons that you clicked on. I could be wrong but
>I think that was a function of the special edition of Win95.
>
>If it's a bad CD, any way I could dump the contents to a folder on
>another machine, and insert the needed file from another O/S disk,
>then burn a new CD? I have copies of 98 & 98SE.
Unless someone has a copy of the special Packard Bell
software interface (it's just going to be an application
running on win95, not part of win95 itself), your only hope
to get that working is to copy off the files used for that.
First let's back up a bit. When you're doing the
installation, is it doing a standard win95 installation or
is it doing more of an OEM imaging operation where it is
copying a preset configuration and/or entire drive partition
image? I don't recall exactly what Win95 installation
process looked like but would guess a lot like the Win98
process.
Also keep in mind that it may be possible to install
Win98/98SE and also install that Packard Bell special
interface... or maybe it's not, but in general a Win95 app
may install and work on 98, if you can locate the associated
files to install it.
Yes there is a chance you could dump the files onto another
system and add those that are missing/unreadable. You may
need the Win95 files though (or it might be Win95OSR2, a
later version of win95?), not the 98 or SE files if you
really want Win95 on it instead of Win98. Generally
speaking I would recommend either Win95 or Win98 modified
with "98Lite" (Google searching should find it) to make 98
take up less memory and processor time, if the system is
Pentium 133 or slower, or has less than 48MB of memory.
That is if you plan on actually using it instead of having
it running only for nostalgic reasons.
If Win95 CD is set up like Win98 was, there may be a Win95
folder on the CD which has a few setup and loader related
files then a bunch of *.cab files. Try copying the contents
of this folder if it exists, to a folder on another system
then see what won't copy and get the corresponding files
from same version of the Win95 CD. It's not necessarily
important to remake a new CD, if you had these files in a
folder on the drive then you can simply boot a Win95 or DOS
boot floppy on the PB system then run the setup from DOS.
It will install much faster reading the installation files
from the hard drive than if it had been reading them from
the CD.
Also keep in mind that as old as this system is, the CDROM
drive could easily be poor at reading discs today. Perhaps
some portions of your PB CD are harder to read but maybe a
newer optical drive could still read them. With that in
mind you might try temporarily (or permanently as a
replacement drive) putting a different optical drive in the
PB system and retrying the original installation. That is,
if you find a different system can read all the files in a
copy operation then it seems there is still hope for the old
CD to work with a different drive in the PB.
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