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The hard drive transfer speed might be just as fast, but you have to remember that the CPU utilization for the SCSI system will be much, much lower.
Mirrors my experiance with win9x as well. Misbehaving OS/2 applications could be easy to trip OS/2 up at times due to it's single input cue. Had it lock solid on quite a few occasions and a hard reset was required. Kernal panics in linux wasn't uncommon either.The lure of 9x on a Pentium was speed, and all the apps and games it can run that NT at that time didn't like (or didn't support the hardware with drivers). I never had a BSOD every day or week even, kind of a rarity (unless you had bad hardware or drivers). About the only issue I had with 9x is that if you installed and uninstalled a million apps and games you needed a complete reformat about every 8-12 months because the system started to get slow.
This is interesting info, thanks for sharing!
Too bad SCSI harddrives seem to be very loud, driving the owner mad!![]()
I've never understood why people want everything so quiet. I'd rather hear it and know it's working. I never had a problem with hard drive noise. If anything, they're too quiet now. It's next to impossible to hear how much seeking is going on.Too bad SCSI harddrives seem to be very loud, driving the owner mad!![]()
Yep, me neither. 16MB was the only way to go, especially with a 16MB permanent swap file.Heck I didn't like running Windows 3.11 without 16MB back in the day.
I've never understood why people want everything so quiet. I'd rather hear it and know it's working. I never had a problem with hard drive noise. If anything, they're too quiet now. It's next to impossible to hear how much seeking is going on.
I've never understood why people want everything so quiet. I'd rather hear it and know it's working. I never had a problem with hard drive noise. If anything, they're too quiet now. It's next to impossible to hear how much seeking is going on.
I want the system I sit behind to be as silent as reasonably possible. After a couple hours near a loud wining harddrive it'll drive me mad!I've never understood why people want everything so quiet. I'd rather hear it and know it's working. I never had a problem with hard drive noise. If anything, they're too quiet now. It's next to impossible to hear how much seeking is going on.
I totally agree with you.Well, I can say that in the days of mainframes, the machine room could get pretty loud, even with the lids on the train printers down. After a night in the machine room, I'd go home with my ears ringing--it chewed at your nerves as well. The vacuum pumps in the tape drives were the worst.
I want my systems to be quiet--no fan noise, disk noise, nothing. Maybe a barely-audible hum is okay. I need to think and don't need more noise.
If it's loud that's a different story, but I think the pindrop silent phenomenon I've observed in the last decade is a bit silly. I mean you usually can't have high-performance and quiet in the same product (unless you're the Audi LeMans prototype--what a machine!). And what's with manufacturers hiding the activity LEDs? Or replacing them with ones that just generally flash regardless of the activity? I've got external drives that do that and are silent. Great, I have no idea how much I'm stressing the thing.One of my DOS machines has a Fujitsu drive which has a loud whine.
As for a lot of seeking, I don't generally allow that. Anyway it is indeed a good idea to know when the HDD is being accessed, and for that I usually attach an led. Big and bright is good.
I guess after reading all the responses that I'm a bit immune to the mechanical noise. I guess it's just me. I like an exhaust note on my cars as well.I want the system I sit behind to be as silent as reasonably possible. After a couple hours near a loud wining harddrive it'll drive me mad!
. . .If it's loud that's a different story, but I think the pindrop silent phenomenon I've observed in the last decade is a bit silly. I mean you usually can't have high-performance and quiet in the same product (unless you're the Audi LeMans prototype--what a machine!). And what's with manufacturers hiding the activity LEDs? Or replacing them with ones that just generally flash regardless of the activity? I've got external drives that do that and are silent. Great, I have no idea how much I'm stressing the thing.
I guess after reading all the responses that I'm a bit immune to the mechanical noise. I guess it's just me. I like an exhaust note on my cars as well.![]()
No luck finding anything with regards to HPFS but it seems you can get NT 4 to run on a Fat 32 partition:- http://toastytech.com/guis/miscb2.htmlHere's a VFAT driver for NT 3.51 and 4.0. I don't know if you can jigger the installation of NT to get it to boot from a FAT32 partition however. I'm inclined to think that the boot has to be from FAT16 or NTFS.
Has anyone tried to boot NT 4.0 or 3.51 from an HPFS partition? Can it be done?
HPFS, if I remember right, was a precursor to NTFS.. right? I've never dealt with that FS.. IIRC they used it on Macs, and also on CDs...?
I'm pretty confident I could get 98SE to chainboot from an NTFS partition, if anybody cares to challenge me to do so.. ;D You'd need a tiny FAT16 (or other) partition to hold the DOS portion of the boot, and then after loading some NTFS supporting drivers you could proceed to hop into 98SE.. not that complicated, once I explain it like that, actually.. In a multiboot situation this might be an option to look at.
If somebody wants me to try that out I'll also write a guide with specifics.