Third time's a charm

Third time's a charm...

I'm in the midst of installing Windows 98 on a Gateway Solo 2300 laptop. It can be somewhat challenging installing Windows onto a blank hard drive on a laptop when you can only use either the CD-ROM drive or the Floppy drive, not both at once. I think I've finally got it down to a science:

1. Boot from Windows 98 Startup Disk.

2. Run fdisk and partition the hard disk. Reboot to Windows 98 Startup disk.

3. format c:

4. sys c:

5. copy the contents of a: to c:\

6. edit autoexec.bat and change the a:\ in the path to c:\

7. edit setramd.bat and change the reference "a:\findramd" to "c:\findramd"

8. Put the CD-ROM drive in, with the Windows 98 CD in it and reboot. If all goes well, you'll boot from the hard disk, and it'll detect the CD-ROM.

9. Make a directory called Win98 (or whatever you want) and copy the contents of the Win98 directory on the CD-ROM to it.

10. Go to C:\win98 and run setup.exe, this will install Windows 98 from this directory, meaning you'll never be prompted to insert the CD when you're on the road and you need some silly driver you've never used before.

I finally got the fax I was waiting for from FileMaker. This was the third time we'd called them about this, and the third time they said they were faxing it. This time, I refused to get off the phone until the technician I was speaking to personally faxed the information to me. He was nice about it, I think he understood my frustration at having to call three times to receive a simple fax.

Professional Strength Athlons?

Professional-strength Athlons?

I'm going to quote myself from Slashdot: Are any of the BIG system vendors (Gateway, Dell, Micron, etc.) selling corporate Athlon systems? I'd love to implement some, but so far all I've seen are systems aimed at consumers. Gateway has their Select line, but I want my systems to come with Windows 2000 on them, as well as having the management features of the Dell Optiplex line or the Gateway E-XXXX lines. The other thing preventing me from using Athlons, at this point, is the numerous gripes I've heard about getting X video card to work, or the right RAM, etc. I don't mind doing a lot of research and fiddling with my own machine, but things like that can become a nightmare when you have to support 250 of them!

Is anyone using Athlons en masse in a professional environment? I don't really have any concerns about using AMD chips, I just want to be able to purchase business-class systems based on them.

Happy Easter to those who celebrate it, and happy April 23 to those who don't!

On The Road Again

On the road again...

I'm at my grandparents' house for the Easter weekend, having to dial-in from the Sony VAIO I grabbed from work. Connecting at 26,400 baud is a shock when you're used to having a cable modem.

What would a visit home be without having to provide some tech support? The bearing in the CPU fan on my grandparents' IBM Aptiva was going out, so it sounded pretty bad. It took me a little over two hours of criss-crossing Mason City to find a Socket 7 cooling fan. It was at the second Radio Shack I tried, and outrageously priced at that! Fifteen dollars for a part that would normally cost me $7.50! I'm not sure who the genius is who made the label for this part, it reads: "For Pentium Processors from 75 to 200 mHz" Gee, I guess those with 233mHz Pentium chips are out of luck, not to mention everyone with a Cyrix, Winchip, or an AMD processor. For the record, it's working fine with their K6 at 233mHz.

Helter-Skelter

Helter-Skelter

I have no idea why, but when I installed Norton AntiVirus 2000 on the associate dean's computer this afternoon, to remove the W97M.Panther virus he'd been e-mailed, the Eudora plug-in reconfigured his POP account from "username@acad.uni.edu" to "username/acad.uni.edu@127.0.0.1" Needless to say, this didn't work too well, as he isn't running a POP server on "localhost".

NeoMagic is quitting the graphics chip business, according to this story over at News.com. Hurrah! Their chips were rather underpowered for my tastes, especially when compared to the Rage Mobility chips from ATI. It's too bad I'll still have to use one of them this weekend on the Sony VAIO I'm taking home...

Still no fax from FileMaker, I'll call them again on Monday...

My office is a mess today, as you can see below. The Bad News is that this has pretty much disrupted my entire day, since I've hardly even been able to check my e-mail, much less get any work done at my desk. The Good News is that we're getting more power and network jacks in my office. We were on a single circuit with the whole lobby of the building, and a classroom next to me as well. If we plugged in more than 5 computers at a time in this office, we'd trip the breaker! It's a good thing I've got everything on a UPS. Here's a snapshot:

Things that make you pull your hair out...

Things that make you pull your hair out...

I still haven't gotten that fax from FileMaker...

I hate CD drives that are mounted sideways. I just spent 20 minutes retrieving a faculty member's Chicago CD from his Gateway E3200. One of the little prongs that holds the CD in apparently got pushed back in, so when the CD tray came out, the CD stayed in the computer. I should mention I also hate the E3200. You can use it as a desktop computer, or turn it on the side, hence the sideways CD-ROM. The computers are compact, but not very expandable at all, not to mention being a pain to work on. They're the iMac of the PC world.

Well, it looks like Iowa State has a position open for a Systems Support Specialist II working for the library. I'd love to go back to working at ISU, but the thought of working with Microsoft Access all day makes me shudder.

From Macintouch: "You may want to warn your readers that the Apple 17" studio display monitor will ONLY work with the Beige G3 if (if and only if) you use an Apple brand VGA-to-Mac Adapter. No TIL or "read me" mentions this limitation. I underwent Herculean efforts using various bands of adapters, some with dip switches, other without, and none worked. Finally, someone at Apple confirmed that you needed one of their adapters. Few stores stock their adapters, much less know about the need for an Apple Adapter. ComputerWare, who sold me the monitor, and CompUSA do not even stock the Apple adapter. I had to buy it direct from Apple." These are the kind of problems I hate to troubleshoot, the kind that make you want to pull your hair out when you do find the solution, because it's so simple.