Compaq PC100 Bedienungsanleitung

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Richtige Gebrauchsanleitung

Die Vorschriften verpflichten den Verkäufer zur Übertragung der Gebrauchsanleitung Compaq PC100 an den Erwerber, zusammen mit der Ware. Eine fehlende Anleitung oder falsche Informationen, die dem Verbraucher übertragen werden, bilden eine Grundlage für eine Reklamation aufgrund Unstimmigkeit des Geräts mit dem Vertrag. Rechtsmäßig lässt man das Anfügen einer Gebrauchsanleitung in anderer Form als Papierform zu, was letztens sehr oft genutzt wird, indem man eine grafische oder elektronische Anleitung von Compaq PC100, sowie Anleitungsvideos für Nutzer beifügt. Die Bedingung ist, dass ihre Form leserlich und verständlich ist.

Was ist eine Gebrauchsanleitung?

Das Wort kommt vom lateinischen „instructio”, d.h. ordnen. Demnach kann man in der Anleitung Compaq PC100 die Beschreibung der Etappen der Vorgehensweisen finden. Das Ziel der Anleitung ist die Belehrung, Vereinfachung des Starts, der Nutzung des Geräts oder auch der Ausführung bestimmter Tätigkeiten. Die Anleitung ist eine Sammlung von Informationen über ein Gegenstand/eine Dienstleistung, ein Hinweis.

Leider widmen nicht viele Nutzer ihre Zeit der Gebrauchsanleitung Compaq PC100. Eine gute Gebrauchsanleitung erlaubt nicht nur eine Reihe zusätzlicher Funktionen des gekauften Geräts kennenzulernen, sondern hilft dabei viele Fehler zu vermeiden.

Was sollte also eine ideale Gebrauchsanleitung beinhalten?

Die Gebrauchsanleitung Compaq PC100 sollte vor allem folgendes enthalten:
- Informationen über technische Daten des Geräts Compaq PC100
- Den Namen des Produzenten und das Produktionsjahr des Geräts Compaq PC100
- Grundsätze der Bedienung, Regulierung und Wartung des Geräts Compaq PC100
- Sicherheitszeichen und Zertifikate, die die Übereinstimmung mit entsprechenden Normen bestätigen

Warum lesen wir keine Gebrauchsanleitungen?

Der Grund dafür ist die fehlende Zeit und die Sicherheit, was die bestimmten Funktionen der gekauften Geräte angeht. Leider ist das Anschließen und Starten von Compaq PC100 zu wenig. Eine Anleitung beinhaltet eine Reihe von Hinweisen bezüglich bestimmter Funktionen, Sicherheitsgrundsätze, Wartungsarten (sogar das, welche Mittel man benutzen sollte), eventueller Fehler von Compaq PC100 und Lösungsarten für Probleme, die während der Nutzung auftreten könnten. Immerhin kann man in der Gebrauchsanleitung die Kontaktnummer zum Service Compaq finden, wenn die vorgeschlagenen Lösungen nicht wirksam sind. Aktuell erfreuen sich Anleitungen in Form von interessanten Animationen oder Videoanleitungen an Popularität, die den Nutzer besser ansprechen als eine Broschüre. Diese Art von Anleitung gibt garantiert, dass der Nutzer sich das ganze Video anschaut, ohne die spezifizierten und komplizierten technischen Beschreibungen von Compaq PC100 zu überspringen, wie es bei der Papierform passiert.

Warum sollte man Gebrauchsanleitungen lesen?

In der Gebrauchsanleitung finden wir vor allem die Antwort über den Bau sowie die Möglichkeiten des Geräts Compaq PC100, über die Nutzung bestimmter Accessoires und eine Reihe von Informationen, die erlauben, jegliche Funktionen und Bequemlichkeiten zu nutzen.

Nach dem gelungenen Kauf des Geräts, sollte man einige Zeit für das Kennenlernen jedes Teils der Anleitung von Compaq PC100 widmen. Aktuell sind sie genau vorbereitet oder übersetzt, damit sie nicht nur verständlich für die Nutzer sind, aber auch ihre grundliegende Hilfs-Informations-Funktion erfüllen.

Inhaltsverzeichnis der Gebrauchsanleitungen

  • Seite 1

    TRADEMARK All products and company names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders. These specifications are subject to change without notice. Manual Revision 1.0 May 24, 2001 User’ User’ User’ User’ User’ s s s s s Manual Manual Manual Manual Manual A Soc A Soc A Soc A Soc A Soc k k k k k et 370 Pr et 370 Pr et [...]

  • Seite 2

    [...]

  • Seite 3

    T able of Contents Section 1 Introduction Components Checklist ........................................ 1 - 1 Form-Factor ......................................................... 1 - 2 I/O Shield Connector .......................................... 1 - 3 Po w e r- O n /O f f ( Re m o te ) ..................................... 1 - 3 System Block Di[...]

  • Seite 4

    IDE HDD Auto Detection ..................................... 4-24 Save & Exit Setup ................................................ 4-26 Exit W ithout Saving ............................................. 4-26 Appendix Appendix A GHOST 5.1/6.03 Quick User  s Guide ................ A-1 Appendix B Update Y our System BIOS .....................[...]

  • Seite 5

    Introduction Page 1-1 Section 1 INTRODUCTION Components Checklist 9 9 9 9 9 A . ( 1 ) One mainboard 9 9 9 9 9 B. ( 1 ) One user s manual 9 9 9 9 9 C. ( 1 ) Floppy ribbon cable 9 9 9 9 9 D. ( 1 ) A T A-66 IDE ribbon cable 9 9 9 9 9 E . ( 1 ) COM Port Connector 9 9 9 9 9 F . ( 1 ) Driver and utility USERS MANUAL B A C D F or E[...]

  • Seite 6

    Introduction Page 1-2 Mainboard For m F actor The board is designed with MicroA TX form factor - the new industry standard of chassis. The MicroA TX form factor is essentially a Baby-A T baseboard rotated 90 degrees within the chassis enclosure and a new mounting configuration for the power supply . W ith these changes the processor is relocated aw[...]

  • Seite 7

    Introduction Page 1-3 Case (chassis) Power ON/OFF button AT X POWER SUPPLY Figur e 4: Simple A TX Power ON/OFF Contr oller P ow er-On/Of f (Remote) The board has a single 20-pin connector for A TX power supplies. For A TX power supplies that support the Remote On/Off feature, this should be connected to the systems front panel for system Power On/O[...]

  • Seite 8

    Introduction Page 1-4 Figur e 5: System Block Diagram System Block Diagram PA C PCI Bridge and me m or y cont r oll er VT8501 soc k et 7 Pr oces sor 100/66 MHz 100/ 66 MH z CRT VT82C686A I/O B ri dge USB 0 USB 1 AC97 CODEC ~ ~ ~ AMR Slot[...]

  • Seite 9

    .A=JKHAI Page 2-1 Section 2 FEA TURES Mainboar d F eatur es:      PROCESSOR - Socket 7 CPUs: Operating at 166-550MHz - AMD K6-2/III, Cyrix M II, Idt C6 / W inchip2 and Rise mP6 series - Intel Pentium ® /Pentium ® Processor with MMX TM T echnology ,      CHIPSET - VIA Apollo MVP4 AGPset (VT8501 + VT82C686A)   ?[...]

  • Seite 10

    .A=JKHAI Page 2-2      USB - USB connector x 4 (2 for Opt.)      BIOS - A ward Plug & Play BIOS      Built-in AC97 Digital Audio (by VT82C686A) - Dual full-duplex Direct Sound channels - H/W Sound Blaster Pro for DOS legacy compatibility - FM synthesis for legacy compatibility - Supports game and MID[...]

  • Seite 11

    Installation Page 3-1 Mainboard Detailed Layout Figur e 1 Section 3 INST ALLA TION[...]

  • Seite 12

    Installation Page 3-2 Easy Installation Procedure The following must be completed before powering on your new system: 3-1. CPU Insertion 3-2. Jumper Settings 3-3. System memory Configuration 3-4. Device Connectors Section 3-1 CPU Inser tion CPU Insertion Step 1 Open the socket by raising the actuation lever. Figure 2 Step 2 Insert the processor. En[...]

  • Seite 13

    Installation Page 3-3 Step 3 Close the socket by lowering and locking the actuation lever. Note: Intels reference design thermal solution is an active heatsink; an extruded alumi- num heatsink based and a fan attached to the top on the fin array. (See Figure 5) Figure 4 Figure 5[...]

  • Seite 14

    Installation Page 3-4 Section 3-2 J umper Settings SW1: CPU Speed Selection 1 W S s u B k c o l C 12 3 4 N Oz H M 6 6 N Oz H M 5 7 N ON Oz H M 3 8 N ON Oz H M 0 9 N ON Oz H M 5 9 N ON ON Oz H M 0 0 1 N ON ON Oz H M 5 0 1 N ON ON Oz H M 5 1 1 1 W S U P C r e i l p i t l u M 6 C T D I / x i r y C / D M A U P C r e i l p i t l u M 2 p i h C n i W T D [...]

  • Seite 15

    Installation Page 3-5 +27  6 OFA 59 CP U Bu s Cloc k CPU Multiplier Pentium/M MX AMD K6/K6 - 2/K 6III ID T-C6 C yrix /IBM 6x 86MX/M II IDT W in c h ip 2 Rise MP6 123 45 6 7 166MH z PR 200 ON ON O N 66MH z 2.5X PR233 O N ON O N 75M H z PR266 2 33M H z O N O N O N ON 83M H z PR300 *PR333 O N O N O N ON 95MHz 250MH z PR36 6 300MH z * PR 366 ON O[...]

  • Seite 16

    Installation Page 3-6 Section 3-3 System Memor y Configuration Memor y Layout The board supports (2) PC100 168-pin DIMMs (Dual In-line Memory Module). The DIMMs is for SDRAM (Synchronous DRAM) .  DIMM SDRAM may be 83MHz (12ns), 100MHz (10ns), 125MHz (8ns) bus speed.  If you use both 50ns and 60ns memory you must configure your BIOS to read 60[...]

  • Seite 17

    Installation Page 3-7 DIMM Module Installation Figure 7 displays the notch marks and what they should look like on your DIMM memory module. DIMMs have 168-pins and two notches that will match with the onboard DIMM socket. DIMM modules are installed by placing the chip firmly into the socket at a 90 degree angle and pressing straight down (figure 8)[...]

  • Seite 18

    Installation Page 3-8 Section 3-4 Device Connectors GND PM E +5 V Stan dby J4 J6 J4/J6: CPU/Chassis Fan  A plug-in for the CPU/Chassis Fan Power CPU Fan J7: WOL (W ake On LAN) Connector Reserved for NIC (Network Interface Card) to wake the system. GND +1 2V Ro tation PS/2 Mouse PS/2 KEYBOARD COM1 VGA1 parallel port Speaker Joystick/Midi USB port[...]

  • Seite 19

    Installation Page 3-9 FDD1: Floppy Controller Connector (Black color) IDE1: Ultra A T A-66 Primary IDE Connector (White color) IDE2: Ultra A T A-66 Secondary IDE Connector (White color) PW1: A TX Power Connector  20-pin power connector CD1 : CD Audio_IN Connector CD1 MODEM1 MODEM1 : T elephony Connector for Modem audio output CD_IN_Left 1 CD_IN_[...]

  • Seite 20

    Installation Page 3-10 J3      Power On/Off (This is connected to the power button on the case. Using the Soft-Off by Pwr-BTTN feature, you can choose either Instant Off (turns system off immediately), or 4 sec delay (you need to push the button down for 4 seconds before the system turns off). When the system is in 4 sec delay mode, [...]

  • Seite 21

    Installation Page 3-11 Page Left Blank[...]

  • Seite 22

    BIOS Page 4-1 Section 4 AWARD BIOS SETUP BIOS Instr uctions A ward s ROM BIOS provides a built-in Setup program which allows user to modify the basic system configuration and hardware parameters. The modified data will be stored in a battery-backed CMOS, so that data will be retained even when the power is turned off. In general, the information[...]

  • Seite 23

    BIOS Page 4-2 The menu displays all the major selection items. Select the item you need to reconfigure. The selection is made by moving the cursor (press any direction key ) to the item and pressing the Enter  key . An on-line help message is displayed at the bottom of the screen as the cursor is moved to various items which provides a better[...]

  • Seite 24

    BIOS Page 4-3 Note: If the hard disk Primary Master/Slave and Secondary Master/Slave are set to Auto, then the hard disk size and model will be auto- detected. Note: The Halt On: field is used to determine when to halt the system by the BIOS if an error occurs. Note: Floppy 3 Mode support is a mode used to support a special 3.5 drive used [...]

  • Seite 25

    BIOS Page 4-4 V irus W arning : During and after the system boots up, any attempt to write to the boot sector or partition table of the hard disk drive will halt the system and an error message will appear. Y ou should then run an anti-virus program to locate the virus. Keep in mind that this feature protects only the boot sector, not the entire ha[...]

  • Seite 26

    BIOS Page 4-5 Boot Up Floppy Seek : During Power-On-Self-T est (POST), BIOS will deter- mine if the floppy disk drive installed is 40 or 80 tracks. Only 360K type is 40 tracks while 760K, 1.2MB and 1.44MB are all 80 tracks. The default is Enabled. Enabled : The BIOS will search the floppy disk drive to determine if it is 40 or 80 tracks. Disabled :[...]

  • Seite 27

    BIOS Page 4-6 250 : 250 msec. 500 : 500 msec. 750 : 750 msec. 1000 : 1000 msec. Security Option : This category allows you to limit access to the System and Setup, or just to Setup. The default is Setup. System : The system will not boot and the access to Setup will be denied if the correct password is not entered at the prompt. Setup : The system [...]

  • Seite 28

    BIOS Page 4-7 D4000 - D7FFF Shadow : D8000 - DBFFF Shadow : DC000 - DFFFF Shadow : These categories determine whether ROMs from option cards will be copied into RAM. This will be in 16K byte or 32K byte units, and the size will depend on chipset of the option card. Enabled : Optional shadow is enabled. Disabled : Optional shadow is disabled.[...]

  • Seite 29

    BIOS Page 4-8 4-3 Chipset F eatures Setup Choose the CHIPSET FEA TURES SETUP in the CMOS SETUP UTILITY menu to display following menu. Figur e 4: Chipset Featur es Setup Bank 0/1, 2/3, 4/5 DRAM Timing : This value in this field is set by the system board manufacturer, depending on whether the board has paged DRAMs. The Choice: Bank 0/1, 2/3, [...]

  • Seite 30

    BIOS Page 4-9 DRAM Fast Decoding : This item will effective DRAM operation sequential. The Choice: Enabled, Disabled. DRAM Read Pipeline : Y ou may select Enabled fo this field when PBSRAMs are installed. Pipelining improves system performance. The Choice: Enabled, Disabled. Sustained 3T Write : This item allow you to enable or disable direct map w[...]

  • Seite 31

    BIOS Page 4-10 Frame Buffer Size : Specify the size of system memory to allocate for video memory, from 1 MB to 8 MB. The Choice: 2MB, 4MB, 8MB. AGP Aperture Size : The amount of system memory that the AGP card is allowed to share. The default is 64. 4 : 4MB of systems memory accessable by the AGP card. 8 : 8MB of systems memory accessable by the A[...]

  • Seite 32

    BIOS Page 4-11 4-4 P ow er Management Setup Choose the POWER MANAGEMENT SETUP in the CMOS SETUP UTILITY to display the following screen. This menu allows the user to modify the power management parameters and IRQ signals. In general, these parameters should not be changed unless it s absolutely necessary . Figur e 5: Power Management Setup[...]

  • Seite 33

    BIOS Page 4-12 Min. saving : Minimum power savings. Inactivity period is 1 hour in each mode. User define : Allows user to define PM Timers parameters to control power saving mode. PM controlled APM : This option shows weather or not you want the Power Man- agement to be controlled the Advanced Power Management (APM). The default is Y es. Ye s : AP[...]

  • Seite 34

    BIOS Page 4-13 Doze Mode: The Doze mode timer starts to count when no PM events have occurred. Suspend Mode : This function works only when the Pentium II Processor is installed. The timer starts to count when System Standby mode timer is timed out and no PM Events are occurring. V alid range is from 1 minute up to 1 hour . [...]

  • Seite 35

    BIOS Page 4-14 Modem Ring Resume : When set to Enabled , any event occurring to the Modem Ring will awaken a system which has been powered down. Primary INTR : When set to On (default), any event occurring at will awaken a system which has been powered down. 4-5 PNP/PCI Configuration The PNP/PCI configuration program is for the user to modify the P[...]

  • Seite 36

    BIOS Page 4-15 Auto : If your ISA card and PCI card are all PNP cards, BIOS will assign the interrupt resource automatically. Reset Configuration Data : This setting allows you to clear ESCD data. The default is Disabled Disabled : Normal Setting. Enabled : If you have plugged in some Legacy cards to the system and they were recorded into ESCD (Ext[...]

  • Seite 37

    BIOS Page 4-16 AGP Master 1 WS Read : When Enabled, read to the AGP bus are executed with one wait states. The Choice: Enabled, Disabled. Assign IRQ For USB/VGA : This item allows BIOS to assign whether IRQ is with USB/VGA or not. If you have not connect the USB/VGA device. Can release the IRQ for other device. The default is Enabled. Enalbed : Pro[...]

  • Seite 38

    BIOS Page 4-17 4-6 Inte gr ated P eripher als Figur e 8: Integrated Peripherals Note: If you do not use the Onboard IDE connector , then you will need to set Onboar d Primary PCI IDE: Disabled and Onboar d Secondary PCI IDE: Disabled Note: The Onboard PCI IDE cable should be equal to or less than 18 inches (45 cm.). Onchip IDE Channel0/1 : The defa[...]

  • Seite 39

    BIOS Page 4-18 IDE HDD Block Mode : IDE Block Mode allows the controller to access blocks of sectors rather than a single sector at a time. The default is Enabled. Enabled : Enabled IDE HDD Block Mode. Provides higher HDD transfer rates. Disabled : Disable IDE HDD Block Mode. Primary Master/Slave PIO: The default is Auto. Auto : BIOS will automatic[...]

  • Seite 40

    BIOS Page 4-19 UAR T 2 Mode : This item allows you to determine which Infra Red (IR) function of onboard I/O chip. The Choice: Standard, ASKIR, HPSIR. Onboard Parallel port : This field allows the user to configure the LPT port. The default is 378H / IRQ7. 378H : Enable Onboard LPT port and address is 378H and IRQ7. 278H : Enable Onboard LPT port a[...]

  • Seite 41

    BIOS Page 4-20 MPU-401: MPU-401 function enabled/disabled. MPU-401 I/O Address: Built-in MPU-401 compatible MIDI I/O port selection. The choice: 300-303H, 310-313H, 320-323H, 330-333H (default). FM Port (388-38BH): Frequency modulation port at I/O port 388-38BH enabled/disabled. Game Port (200-207H): Built-in joystick port support disabled/enabled.[...]

  • Seite 42

    BIOS Page 4-21 4-8 SENSOR AND CPU SPEED SETUP Figur e 9: Sensor And CPU Speed Setup Auto Detect DIMM/PCI Clk : When enabled the motherboard will automatically disable the clock source for a DIMM socket which does not have a module in it. Same applies for PCI slots. The default is Enabled. Spread Spectrum : The default is Disabled. CPU Host Clock (C[...]

  • Seite 43

    BIOS Page 4-22 Curr ent CPU T emperature : This is the current temperature of the CPU. Curr ent CPU F AN Speed : The current CPU fan speed in RPMs. Curr ent Chassis F AN Speed : The current chassis fan speed in RPMs. CPU(V) : The voltage level of the CPU(V io/Vcore). +2.5V, +3.3V , +5V, +12V : The voltage level of the switch power supply.[...]

  • Seite 44

    BIOS Page 4-23 4-9 Change Super visor or User Pass word T o change the password, choose the SUPER VISOR P ASSWORD or USER P ASSWORD option from the CMOS SETUP UTILITY menu and press [Enter]. NOTE: Either Setup or System must be selected in the Security Option of the BIOS FEA TURES SETUP menu. 1. If CMOS is corrupted or the o[...]

  • Seite 45

    BIOS Page 4-24 4-10 IDE HDD Auto Detection The IDE HDD auto detection utility is a very useful tool, especially when you do not know which kind of hard disk type you are using. Y ou can use this utility to detect the correct disk type installed in the system automatically. But now you can set HARD DISK TYPE to Auto in the ST ANDARD CMOS SETUP[...]

  • Seite 46

    BIOS Page 4-25 If user set his HDD to NORMAL mode, the maximum accessible HDD size will be 528 Megabytes even though its physical size may be greater than that! LBA (Logical Block Addressing) mode : A new HDD accessing method to overcome the 528 Megabyte bottleneck. The number of cylinders, heads & sectors shown in setup may not be the number p[...]

  • Seite 47

    BIOS Page 4-26 Note: T o support LBA or LARGE mode of HDDs, ther e must be some softwar e involved. All the software is located in the A ward HDD Service Routine (INT 13h). It may fail to access a HDD with LBA (LARGE) mode selected if you ar e running under an Operating System which replaces the whole INT 13h. UNIX operating systems do not support [...]

  • Seite 48

    Appendix A-1 Appendix A A- 1 GHOST 5.1/6.03 Quick User’s Guide Installation is very easy . Y ou only need to copy the Ghost5 folder or Ghost.exe to your hard disk. The current market version is for single Client , so the LPT and NetBios portions will not be explained further. Description of Menus Ghost clones and backs up Disk and Partition. In w[...]

  • Seite 49

    Appendix A-2 Disk T o Disk (Disk Cloning) 1. Select the location of the Source drive . 2. Select the location of the Destination drive . 3. When cloning a disk or restoring the backup, set the required partition size as shown in the following figure. There are 3 hard disk functions: 1. Disk T o Disk (disk cloning) 2. Disk T o Image (disk backup) 3.[...]

  • Seite 50

    Appendix A-3 4. Click OK to display the following confirmation screen. Select Y es to start. Disk T o Image (Disk Backup) 1. Select the location of the Source drive. 2. Select the location for storing the backup file.[...]

  • Seite 51

    Appendix A-4 Disk From Image  (Restore Backup) 1. Select the Restore file. 2. Select the Destination drive of the disk to be restored. 3. Click OK to display the following confirmation screen. Select Y es to start.[...]

  • Seite 52

    Appendix A-5 3. When restoring disk backup, set the required partition size as shown in the following figure. 4. Click OK to display the following confirmation screen. Select Y es to start. Partition[...]

  • Seite 53

    Appendix A-6 2. Select the first partition to be backed up. This is usually where the operating system and programs are stored. There are 3 partition functions: 1 . Partition T o Partition (partition cloning) 2 . Partition T o Image (partition backup) 3 . Partition From Image (restore partition) Partition T o Partition (Partition Cloning) The basic[...]

  • Seite 54

    Appendix A-7 3. Select the path and file name for storing the backup file. 4. Is the file compressed? There are 3 options: (1 ) No: do not compress data during backup (2 ) Fast: Small volume compression (3) High: high ratio compression. File can be compressed to its minimum, but this requires longer execution time. 5. During confirmation, select Y [...]

  • Seite 55

    Appendix A-8 Partition From Image (Restore Partition) 1. Select the backup file to be restored. 2. Select the source partition. 3. Select the disk to be restored.[...]

  • Seite 56

    Appendix A-9 4. Select the partition to be restored. 5. Select Y es to start restoring. Check This function checks the hard disk or backup file for backup or restoration error due to F A T or track error .[...]

  • Seite 57

    Appendix A-10 How to Reinstall Windows in 2 Minutes This chapter teaches you how to set your computer properly and, if necessary, reinstall Windows in 2 minutes. Ghost can use different methods to complete this task. The following two sections explain the creation of the emergency Recover Floppy and Recover CD : Emergency Recover Floppy Divide a ha[...]

  • Seite 58

    Appendix A-11 (2) After booting, the screen displays the Menu. Select Backup or Restore: Since the user may install other applications in the future, he/she may design Autoexec.bat as a Menu to back up or restore the user- defined Image file as follows: ) ) ) ) ) Backup Backup Backup Backup Backup Back up W indows and application programs as a file[...]

  • Seite 59

    Appendix A-12 Recover CD In recent years, well-known computer manufacturers (such as IBM, Acer, Compaq, etc.) bundle Recover CDs with their computers to reduce the cost resulting from servicing, while at the same time increasing their market competitiveness. The following is a simple guide to how to create a recover CD: 1. For extremely easy creati[...]

  • Seite 60

    Appendix A-13 Ghost Command Line Switches Reference Ghost may be run in interactive or in batch mode. Batch mode is useful for automat- ing installations for backups using Ghost. Most of the Ghost switches are used to assist with batch mode operation. T o list switches from Ghost, type ghost.exe -h. -clone The full syntax for this switch is: clone,[...]

  • Seite 61

    Appendix A-14 c) DST This defines the destination location for the operation: Mode Meaning COPY/ LOAD Destination drive (e.g, 2 for drive two) DUMP Disk image filename or device,(e.g, g:imagessystem2.img) PCOPY/ PLOAD Destination partition,(e.g, 2:2 indicates the second partition on drive two). PDUMP Partition image filename (e.g, g:imagespart1[...]

  • Seite 62

    Appendix A-15 data space has been satisfied will be distributed between the destination partitions in proportion to the data usage in the source partitions Someexamples follow that will help illustrate: -fx flag Exit. Normally when Ghost has finished copying a new system to a disk, it prompts the user to reboot with a press Ctrl-Alt-Del to reboot w[...]

  • Seite 63

    Appendix A-16 Example 1: T o copy drive one to drive two on a PC, without final prompt if OK to proceed. ghost.exe -clone,mode=copy,src=1,dst=2 sure Example 2: T o connect via NetBIOS to another PC running Ghost in slave mode, and dump a disk image of local drive two to the remote file c:drive2.gho ghost.exe -clone,mode=dump,src=2,dst=C:drive2[...]

  • Seite 64

    Appendix B-1 Appendix B B- 1 Update Y our system BIOS Download the xxxxx.EXE file corresponding to your model form the our website to an empty directory on your hard disk or floppy. Run the downloaded xxxxx.EXE file and it will self extract. Copy these extracted files to a bootable DOS floppy disk. Note: The DOS floppy disk should contain NO device[...]

  • Seite 65

    User Notice No part of this product, including the product and software may be reproduced, transmitted, transcribed, stored in a retrieval system, or translated into any language in any form without the express written permission of EPoX Computer Company (hereinafter referred to as EPoX) except for documentation kept by the purchaser for backup pur[...]

  • Seite 66

    T echnical Support Services If you need additional information, help during installation or normal use of this product, please contact your retailer . Y our retailer will have the most current information about your configuration. If your retailer cannot help, you may visit our online technical support website and/or contact our support technicians[...]