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- From: jerome.yuzyk@freddy.ersys.edmonton.ab.ca (Jerome Yuzyk)
- Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.misc
- Subject: SCSI success and some Q's
- Message-ID: <10303.882.uupcb@freddy.ersys.edmonton.ab.ca>
- Date: 3 Jan 93 11:25:00 GMT
- Reply-To: jerome.yuzyk@freddy.ersys.edmonton.ab.ca (Jerome Yuzyk)
- Distribution: world
- Organization: Freddy's Place BBS - Edmonton, AB - 403-456-4241
- Lines: 133
-
- Having worked with OS/2 for about 9 months now, and having bought some new
- hardware and re-installed (GA + fixes), I have a comment on hardware and a few
-
- questions for the folks here. I had sent out a number of messages to Fido
- and Internet, but either they didn't get through, or no one read them because
- of the Xmas break, or something, so I just went ahead and did it (Boot Manager
- and a variety of FAT and HPFS partitions) and it worked (pat, pat, pat)!
-
- 1. SCSI cards and drives: I recently upgraded to a larger SCSI drive, after
- much trepidation, having read volumes of problem reports from various
- people.
- I had first considered going to one of the "officially recognised"
- adapters,
- but after talking to a wholesalesman friend, I purchased a BUSLOGIC BT-542B
- (ISA version) adapter and a Fujitsu 520M drive. Although I haven't seen a
- single reference to this card, I have to report that it works FLAWLESSLY,
- despite my own ignorance (oh, the card is ID7 and the drive id ID0). BTW,
- OS/2 installed with few hassles when I had incoreectly set both card and
- drive to ID7, but wouldn't work. So, I RTFM and everything goes properly
- now. Installing the driver was a 2-minute job, most of which was the
- Shutdown-Reboot. I highly recommend this card - it has drivers for DOS,
- OS/2, SCO Unix and Netware 3.11 and very decent docs. I don't know if
- this is notable, but the OS/2 drivers seem to be the easiest to install, at
- least if the thin-ness of the OS/2 driver manual is any indication. I
- looked
- over the physical layout of the card, and there again, some good quality
- craftmanship showed - all jumper settings are realized as two banks of DIP
- switches located along the topside of the card so it needn't be removed
- when an idiot installer (me) selects the wrong SCSI ID. Cdn$300 and so far
- worth every penny.
-
- On another note, it's interesting to me how far large drives have changed.
- I
- have a Unix friend that has a 660M ESDI drive that, when it's busy
- unpacking
- mail or doing system admin, thunders so hard you can feel the drive working
- through the floor. Sounds real macho, and might be comforting, like a
- large-block Chev engine. My slightly-smaller Fuji, however, sounds like
- dried peas in a gourd when it's busy - perhaps when I get a sound board I
- can set it up to rumble like stampeding elephants during heavy disk I/O so
- my wife won't snicker at such a `cute' drive.
-
- Now for a couple of questions realized during my re-install. Fortunately I
- have
- two _identical_ machines (except for the drives) and simply LHarc'd everything
- to retain EAs and then used an old PC Magazine utility called Slice to do the
- floppy-shuffle.
-
- 2. What would be (have been) the best way to move my WPS desktop? I
- considered
- WPSBKUP (Dave Lester's program) and WPSBKP (Hank Kelder's program), but I
- didn't want to risk the hassle, since I didn't have a boot floppy, and
- many of my disk partitions are HPFS. I ended up using WPSBKP to get all
- the
- WPS settings for my objects, and then manually recreated them (with some
- maintenance along the way), but man what a time-burner! Waht I would
- really
- have liked to have would be something that would create a text-file version
- of all my settings that I could edit, copy across, and then use to
- re-create
- the WPS. Maybe I missed something there, but I checked through the half-
- dozen WPS and INI utilities I had, and the RedBooks, and couldn't find
- anything I could trust. Ah well, it was a good chance to install again
- with the benefit of 9 months experience...
-
- 3. How can I make a boot floppy that will recognize all my HPFS partitions? I
- am assuming all the boot-disk makers work only for FAT-partitioned drives.
-
- 4. I read a message (somewhere) that a few people out there created small
- (2-3M)
- partitions for a simple OS/2 boot, rather than a floppy-boot. I did so,
- but
- now how do I put a small OS/2 on that partition? Do I just create a
- floppy-
- boot and copy it over?
-
- 5. I decided to use the small WPS icons on my desktop, because I have many of
- them, and they are all pretty chunky in the large format. BUT, what a pain
- in the a*s to move around, because they temporarily grow to their full size
- when being moved, and I'm constantly shifting them to get them reasonably
- aligned with each other. Isn't there some sort of `Grid' setting (like
- Windoze) that would help me along? Or why do the icons have to expand
- during
- a move anyway? I can see well enough to use them at the small size, why
- not
- move them around at that size?
-
- 4. I read a message (somewhere) that a few people out there created small
- (2-3M)
- partitions for a simple OS/2 boot, rather than a floppy-boot. I did so,
- but
- now how do I put a small OS/2 on that partition? Do I just create a
- floppy-
- boot and copy it over?
-
- 5. I decided to use the small WPS icons on my desktop, because I have many of
- them, and they are all pretty chunky in the large format. BUT, what a pain
- in the a*s to move around, because they temporarily grow to their full size
- when being moved, and I'm constantly shifting them to get them reasonably
- aligned with each other. Isn't there some sort of `Grid' setting (like
- Windoze) that would help me along? Or why do the icons have to expand
- during
- a move anyway? I can see well enough to use them at the small size, why
- not
- move them around at that size?
-
- 6. (A lingering problem). I use FSHL for my command-line shell (it's like
- 4OS2)
- and created a program icon for an OS/2 window. I attached a pretty icon I
- got from Windoze to this object (an open door with an arrow pointing to the
- opening). Whenever I open this object, the window icon (in the upper-left)
- shows the OS/2 window icon, and when I minimize the window, the OS/2 window
- icon shows - a known problem. However, there's _something_ I do that will
- change the window icon to the downward-pointing caret icon, and from then
- on
- (until I do _something_ else) the window will minimize using my pretty
- icon. What is happening here? Since I keep one OS/2 window open or
- minimized all the time, I see these icons change back and forth regularly.
- One time she's there, one time she's not, always a surprise. I have the
- Black Icon and SOM fixes installed, so maybe one of those is the cuplrit?
-
- Anyway, this message is long enough, and perhaps won't even be recognized by
- anyone, but after reading a few 100 messages per day, I feel the need to
- contribute. Answer here or through e-mail and you'll have my hearty Thank
- Yous.
-
-
- .-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.-^-.
- Jerome Yuzyk jerome.yuzyk@freddy.ersys.edmonton.ab.ca
- a boy and his doo-dads Edmonton Alberta Canada
- ---
- . MR/2 1.37 NR . It's only a hobby ... only a hobby ... only a
-
-