Enrich your web surfing by clicking on hotlinks. . .
especially if you use easily-adjustable and
quickly-repairable Windows 95, 98SE or ME [using
DOS-based partitions instead of simplistically-complex
and vulnerable 2000, XP, and Vista using NTFS or HPFS
virtual/phantom-C-drive partitions].
Ignoring obsessed educrat and hollywood Mac/Apple
operating-systems goofs diverting off with their anti-PC,
anti-Bill-Gates, anti-Microsoft prejudicial pseudo-intellectualism,
use of Internet Explorer 6.0 (requiring Windows
98SE or ME on a computer with at least a 66 MHz
processor, 16 MB of RAM, and at least a 240 MB harddrive)
with its upper-left-hand-corner dropdown utilities
can be used to rid your computer of spyware and other cookies
plus URL-search history.
For antivirus, have a folder of Trend Micro's P-Cillin
and of Norton (diskette-sized for each one!) residing on the
C-drive and launch them every once in a while to detect
any Stealth, Ripper, or other viruses.
Check your C-drive hidden and other files (not within any folder)
for unusual and suspicious new [file] additions.
Keep in mind that Windows 3.11 is the only reasonably-workable
Windows version which can be launched by loading a random series of
Windows directory files and Windows/System directory files -
[with each file MUCH less than 1.35 MB and thus containable on
under-25-quantity 3.5" diskettes] onto the hard drive.
(There are no .CAB files within loaded or launched Windows 3.11 built on a DOS 6.22 operating system). Windows 3.11 is the only workable Window version of which the launch files are the exact same as the operation files once launched! No loading files in sequential order is required to install Windows 3.11 (though rebooting is requiring once the files are loaded onto the hard drive from files copied from a Windows folder to ONE Windows folder on the C-drive and from files copied from a Windows/System folder to ONE Windows/System folder on the C-drive.
When the BIOS settings are adjusted to allow bootup from a
diskette drive, then booting up a computer containing XP with
a DOS 6.22 boot disk and using the FDISK.EXE utility of DOS 6.22
will bring up the black partition screen enabling you to delete the
Non-Dos [XP] NTFS or HPFS-partition operating system and replace it with a primary DOS-based partition. Keep in mind when restarting the
computer with the DOS 6.22 boot diskette containing MSCDEX.EXE and OAKCDROM.SYS driver files (plus properly-coded CONFIG.SYS and AUTOEXEC.BAT files) for your CD-ROM drive, you must then format the entire C-drive (and lose all info thereon) with the FORMAT.COM utility of DOS 6.22 after which you can run Setup on the [CD-ROM D-drive] for Windows 95, 98SE or ME CD (if your Windows 95, 98SE or ME Operating CD is not the upgrade type but instead intended to be
put on a Missing-Operating-System "new" computer without an operating system already on it). For upgrading with a WIndows 98SE
Operating System CD, have a folder of Win95 already copied to and
residing on your C-drive for upgrade verification and approval. And, it is best to have the OEM number ready to type in for Win 95, 98SE or ME as the load-and-launch sequence for 95, 98SE or ME progresses.
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WIN311ISBEST
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DOSNOTMAC
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FANTASYLESSONS
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BIBLEROS