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Got this FONT in mail from a security mailing list.
If I open that font XP promptly reboots, no warning no bscreen no nothing just a reboot.
If you vant to try it out just pm me with your mail adress and i'll mail you a copy.
Moderator: Edi
Why would we want a virus? or a shitty font?Faram wrote:XP is fucking amazing...
Got this FONT in mail from a security mailing list.
If I open that font XP promptly reboots, no warning no bscreen no nothing just a reboot.
If you vant to try it out just pm me with your mail adress and i'll mail you a copy.
Assuming I have Windows XP.Exonerate wrote:You have an option to run a program in a specific environment (Win95, 98, ME, etc.)greenmm wrote: If you're the average computer nerd/gamer/techie, then it does become a nightmare, particularly when trying to play your favorite classic game (especially the non-NT ones) or upgrade your hardware.
greenmm wrote:Assuming I have Windows XP.Exonerate wrote:You have an option to run a program in a specific environment (Win95, 98, ME, etc.)greenmm wrote: If you're the average computer nerd/gamer/techie, then it does become a nightmare, particularly when trying to play your favorite classic game (especially the non-NT ones) or upgrade your hardware.
But why should I buy a new OS that I have to run in an "emulator" mode, when my old OS runs the program just fine? I don't just mean games, I mean applications (Office 97 does everything I need, for less processor/RAM and hard drive requirements than 2000, let alone XP), web browsing (web pages look the same on Win98 as they did in Win3.1, so why should they look any different in WinXP?), and any other computer activity I engage in.
1. XP does not write to bios, since I've reformatted, and installed Win98, then installed XP over that.Vertigo1 wrote:Alyeska, XP does not write to the BIOS. I've been running it for nearly a year now and it hasn't done anything to my BIOS. You've obviously gotten bitten by a virus or something.
Shinova: the XP CD is bootable
No. The computer should be able to read the CD-ROM on boot (assuming your BIOS has enabled it) and load directly from there, bypassing any other stages.Shinova wrote:1. XP does not write to bios, since I've reformatted, and installed Win98, then installed XP over that.Vertigo1 wrote:Alyeska, XP does not write to the BIOS. I've been running it for nearly a year now and it hasn't done anything to my BIOS. You've obviously gotten bitten by a virus or something.
Shinova: the XP CD is bootable
2. Are you talking about running the XP setup from dos-mode? It doesn't let me do that. (I used win98 setup disk to get into dos mode).
can you not dump CD contents to HDD and read from there?phongn wrote:No. The computer should be able to read the CD-ROM on boot (assuming your BIOS has enabled it) and load directly from there, bypassing any other stages.Shinova wrote:1. XP does not write to bios, since I've reformatted, and installed Win98, then installed XP over that.Vertigo1 wrote:Alyeska, XP does not write to the BIOS. I've been running it for nearly a year now and it hasn't done anything to my BIOS. You've obviously gotten bitten by a virus or something.
Shinova: the XP CD is bootable
2. Are you talking about running the XP setup from dos-mode? It doesn't let me do that. (I used win98 setup disk to get into dos mode).
You cannot install WXP from DOS. You can create a set of bootdisks to load the kernal and then read from the CD.
That's because the installer does a lot more than the W9X installer - which itself only copies important files over, then loads into Win32 to finish the job.Vertigo1 wrote:No because you need to be in a Win32 environment to run the setup program. (which is fucking stupid IMO)