home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: comp.os.ms-windows.win95.misc,comp.os.ms-windows.setup.win95,comp.os.ms-windows.networking.win95,comp.os.ms-windows.apps.compatibility.win95,comp.os.ms-windows.apps.utilities.win95,comp.answers,news.answers
- Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!news.kodak.com!news-nysernet-16.sprintlink.net!news-in-east1.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!newshub.northeast.verio.net!news-peer.gip.net!news.gsl.net!gip.net!newsfeed.cwix.com!204.174.67.209!news.bctel.net!srv4.reelwest.bc.ca!not-for-mail
- From: gordonf@intouch.bc.ca
- Subject: Win95 FAQ Part 3 of 14: Usage
- Message-ID: <19981108.8D7FAB8.11DC8@ras4vpn10.reelwest.bc.ca>
- Date: Sun, 8 Nov 98 20:10:11
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Followup-To: comp.os.ms-windows.win95.misc
- Summary: These postings list many questions asked in said newsgroups,
- and answers them as best as I can. I make references to other
- Web sites and FAQs when appropriate. Visit the WWW home of
- this FAQ (http://www.orca.bc.ca/win95) for the appropriate
- links. This section is the 3rd: Usage
- Organization: Personal and Win95 FAQ maintainence
- X-NoSpamWanted: This address is not for unsolicited commercial e-mail
- X-ImNotKidding: By sending UCE to this address you agree to pay $50.00 CDN
- X-pensive-spam: Payable to G. Fecyk, c/o P.O. Box 373 Oakville, MB R0H 0Y0
- X-ploded-spams: Stop e-mail trespassing. <http://www.orca.bc.ca/dul/>
- X-federal-bill: Section 302, HR3888 / S1618, R.I.P.
- Lines: 669
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu comp.os.ms-windows.win95.misc:326235 comp.os.ms-windows.setup.win95:77858 comp.os.ms-windows.networking.win95:59683 comp.os.ms-windows.apps.compatibility.win95:17911 comp.os.ms-windows.apps.utilities.win95:62547 comp.answers:33799 news.answers:144043
-
- Archive-name: windows/win95/faq/part03
- Last-Modified: 1998/11/08
- Posting-Frequency: Every two months
- URL: http://www.orca.bc.ca/win95/faq3.htm
-
- Subject: 3. Basic Win95 usage
-
- * 3.1. ...vs Windows 3.x
- * 3.2. ...vs MS-DOS (tm)
- * 3.3. What is this "Explorer" thing?
- * 3.4. How do I...
- + 3.4.1. ...find my old Win 3.x programs?
- + 3.4.2. ...make a program read a file I click on?
- + 3.4.3. ...change what program opens what kind of file?
- o 3.4.3.1. How can I add or remove file extensions from
- a file type?
- + 3.4.4. ...run Windows 3.x programs? (including Windows
- games)
- o 3.4.4.1. How do I run Win 3.1 after installing
- Win95?
- o 3.4.4.2. How do I install Win 3.1 fresh in a Win95
- system?
- + 3.4.5. ...run MS-DOS apps?
- + 3.4.6. ...run MS-DOS utilities? (Xtree (tm), Norton
- Utilities (tm), etc)
- + 3.4.7. ...run MS-DOS games?
- + 3.4.8. ...format or copy disks?
- + 3.4.9. ...search for files?
- + 3.4.10. ...add my own items to the Start Menu?
- o 3.4.10.1. The Desktop, Start Menu, and shortcuts
- + 3.4.11. ...change my display resolution?
- + 3.4.12. ...change my display driver?
- + 3.4.13. ...disable the "Full window drag" feature of MS
- Plus?
- * 3.5. Some MS-DOS utilities are missing. Where can I get them?
- * 3.6. Should I buy these new fancy utilities for Win95?
- + 3.6.1. ...Norton Navigator (tm) ?
- + 3.6.2. ...un-installers?
- + 3.6.3. ...anti-virus programs?
- + 3.6.4. ...Microsoft Plus (tm) ?
- + 3.6.5. ...RAM compression programs?
- + 3.6.6. ...crash-proofing utilities?
- * 3.7. Top ten mistakes running Windows 3.x programs
- * 3.8. Top ten mistakes running MS-DOS programs and games
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 3.1. Basic Win95 usage vs Windows 3.x
-
- Win95 sports the cool new Explorer Desktop, in an attempt to be more
- Mac-like. Try to forget what you know about Program Manager, File
- Manager, Print Manager, etc because very little of it applies!
-
- Win 3.1 programs will run like they used to; the window might look a
- bit different, and there might be some extra buttons on the border,
- but they will work otherwise.
-
- Get used to using your right mouse button. On an Amiga, the right
- button was a "menu" button which brought up a hidden menu. On
- OS/2, it brings up menus for each object you click on. On Win95,
- it acts like the OS/2 right-click except it pretty much works on
- anything; window title bars, the Start Menu, any kind of icon,
- properties sheets, whatever.
-
- Win 3.1 programs run in a single process under Win95, cooperatively
- multitasking as they always did since Windows/386. This means one Win
- 3.1 app can suspend the entire Win 3.1 session. In fact, one Win 3.1
- app can suspend all of Win95! This is purely for compatibility.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 3.2. Basic Win95 usage vs MS-DOS (TM)
-
- Microsoft kept DOS for compatibility and nothing else. Win95 includes
- MS-DOS 7.0, which under Win95, is a multitasking DOS. DOS programs run
- in protected sessions like Win95 programs do, and the system
- pre-emptively task-switches between Win32 sessions, DOS sessions, and
- the single Win 3.1 session.
-
- COMMAND.COM is now a multitasking command prompt. Win95 can unload it
- on command, unless a DOS program is running from it. Some Win32
- character-based programs can run from here if they don't depend on
- Windows NT features. Outside of Win95 though, COMMAND.COM, and the
- rest of DOS, is just DOS.
-
- The biggest difference between old DOS and DOS 7.0, is it does not
- allow direct disk writes, to prevent long filename corruption and
- virus infection. Effectively, if a program tries to write to the disk
- directly while outside of Win95, you will get an evil message telling
- you to restart your computer. Normally this is good, but some "good"
- programs (like Windows 3.1 running 32-bit disk access, which DOES work
- in DOS 7.0 by the way) need to access the disk directly. If you can
- trust such programs, type:
-
- LOCK C: (or whatever drive letter)
-
- before running the program. Notice, however, that lock c: only works
- outside of Win95 (like when you "Restart the computer in MS-DOS mode"
- for example), and within Win95, no direct writes are allowed under any
- circumstance.
-
- Some DOS TSRs no longer supported under Explorer are print and subst
- (though subst seems to work in 32-bit mode once you finish installing
- Win95). As a general rule, don't run any DOS TSRs that fiddle with the
- disk handler or require direct access to hardware.
-
- 4.00.950B users will notice their DOS apps will report their DOS
- version as MS-DOS 7.10. This version of DOS supports FAT32 file
- systems. The "32" refers to the number of bits the File Allocation
- Table supports, and as such it can support smaller cluster sizes on
- larger (> 1 GB) drives. FAT32 file systems will not work with DOS
- utilities designed for older versions of DOS. DOS 7.10's scandisk does
- fix serious problems, and Win95 Defrag still does a great job of
- unfragmenting FAT32 drives.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 3.3. What is this "Explorer" thing?
-
- Like I wrote above, it's Win95's new default shell. Explorer actually
- has two big parts and several little ones. The two biggest parts you
- will see right away are the Desktop and the Taskbar. I won't go into
- details, because Microsoft has lots of basic stuff about these two
- devices.
-
- I will go into details on the little pieces, however. Microsoft
- combined the functionality of many utilities (including File Manager,
- Control Panel, Print Manager, Remote Access, Windows Setup, PIF
- editor) into it. Control Panel is pretty obvious and works much the
- way it did back in Win 3.1. The others were completely renamed and
- re-worked, and it'll just take some "Exploring" (pun intended) to
- learn them.
-
- Running explorer.exe with Explorer running will merely open a File
- Manager style window, with directory trees and split displays.
- "Exploring" directories like this is great for power users who need to
- find something fast. Right-click on any folder or drive and select
- "Explore" to begin "Exploring" from that point. You aren't running
- multiple processes of Explorer; you're merely opening another Explorer
- window separate from the Desktop.
-
- Print Manager got replaced by the Printers folder in "My Computer".
- You create and maintain printers here, though there is a shortcut to
- it from Control Panel, for compatibility. When you create printers
- here you may use Win 3.1 printer drivers (though I don't recommend
- this) or Win95 drivers. Microsoft claims NT drivers will install here
- as well, but I couldn't get any of the NT drivers working.
-
- Remote Access gets replaced by Dial-up Networking, which is now a
- general network connection through modems. Dial-up Networking covers
- regular RAS connections, Internet connections, and connections to
- NetWare Connect servers for remote NetWare log ins. Dial-up Networking
- also supports null modems and parallel port cables with Direct Cable
- Connection.
-
- Windows Setup is kinda scattered all over the place, but you'll find
- the main components in the Control Panel's Add New Hardware,
- Add/Remove Programs, and System panels.
-
- PIF files are now "Shortcuts to MS-DOS Programs", and you bring up a
- DOS program's properties to edit its PIF file. Check out How to
- run DOS programs in Win95 for details.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 3.4. How do I...
-
- * 3.4.1. ...find my old Win 3.x programs?
-
- Win95 Setup copied all your group files (.GRP) from Program Manager
- into a directory called (what else), "Start Menu". It copied the icon
- groups into little directories which you can view by pressing the
- Start button, and selecting "Programs".
-
- One notable exception to this, is Setup eliminated the "Main" program
- group entirely. It'll remove icons that no longer apply (like File
- Manager).
-
- If a program installer just copied a .GRP file to the hard disk,
- rather than add the icons through the Windows APIs like it's supposed
- to, you can add that group to the Start Menu by finding the .GRP file
- itself, and opening it (double-clicking it). If programs also try to
- change progman.ini, which contains the group listings, Win95 will move
- them to the Start Menu the next time you restart.
-
- * 3.4.2. ...make a program open a file I click on?
-
- Explorer lets you browse your hard drive and click on documents, as
- well as programs. This works exactly like clicking on documents in
- File Manager; simply double-click on the document to launch its
- associated app.
-
- If you click on a file with an extension it doesn't recognize,
- Explorer offers up a list of programs and lets you choose which one
- you want. You can also give a descriptive name to the file type (such
- as "Doom data file" for .WAD files). You may further edit the file
- type with the View/Options... menu in any Explorer window and
- selecting the "File Types" tab.
-
- * 3.4.3. ...change what program opens what kind of file?
-
- To edit file types, select the View menu and Optionsà in any Explorer
- window. Hit the "File types" tab and you can edit, add, or delete
- known file types. Some file types are hidden from this display (such
- as "System File") to keep you from hurting them. I'll tell you how to
- find them later.
-
- You can do much more than Open a document. Some document types have
- more options than Open if you right-click on them. For example, .BAT
- files have an "Edit" command which brings up Notepad. To add this
- functionality to your own documents, go back to the "File types" tab
- and find the file type you want to add this to, and hit Edit. You can
- then Add an action, such as "Edit", which launches a separate program
- and opens that file. This worked great for me; I have an "Edit" option
- added to all my HTML documents which launches MS-Word, an extra "Edit
- as Text" option to use Notepad instead, so I can remove the extra crap
- that Internet Assistant put in, and "Open" launches Mosaic to view the
- document.
-
- You can also use the File Types tab to disable CD Audio auto-play (by
- turning off "play" as its default action), hide or show extensions for
- particular file types, enable or disable QuickView (provided you
- installed QuickView in Add/Remove Programs / Windows Setup), and
- remove file types completely.
-
- * 3.4.3.1. How can I add or remove filename extensions from a file
- type?
-
- This is not immediately simple, but you can accomplish this two ways:
- 1. Run winfile.exe (File Manager) and use its Associate... menu to
- add extensions to an already existing file type. The file types in
- File Manager corespond with the file types you see in Explorer. I
- recommend this method.
- 2. Edit the Registry using regedit. You'll find all the filename
- extensions in HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT along with the matching file
- types. Simply add a new key with the extension as its name (such
- as ".HTM") and change that key's (default) value so it contains
- the same name as the other extension's default value (such as
- "NetscapeHypertext"). You may also add a second String value named
- "Content Type" to specify a MIME type for this filename extension.
-
- In both cases, when you exit the respective program, press F5 to cause
- Explorer to refresh its display. All files with the new extension will
- change icons and properties to match the file type you assigned it.
- This also works in NT 4.0, but you will need to restart your computer
- to effect the change.
-
- * 3.4.4. ...run Windows 3.x programs? (including Windows games)
-
- If there's an icon in the Start Menu, you can run it from there. When
- you install apps in Win95 that create icons the "proper" way, Explorer
- will build up entries in the Start Menu. You can also find the
- executable itself by browsing the hard drive, then opening it.
- Self-installing archives, such as Win95 Service Pack 1, are one kind
- of Windows program you'll need to run by browsing and opening.
-
- If you don't see your old program group on the Start Menu, or if a
- program just copied a group file (.GRP) to the hard disk, just find
- the .GRP file it installed and Open it. This runs a converter that
- builds Shortcuts for the Start menu.
-
- Windows programs will even run from a DOS session under Win95. Type
- the name of the executable like you would for any DOS program. You can
- open documents from the DOS session with the start command (just like
- the Start Menu "Run" command). START MyDocument.doc will run Microsoft
- Word, and load MyDocument.doc into memory.
-
- A handful of Win 3.1 and Win 3.0 programs won't recognize that you
- have a newer version of Windows, and report an error like, "This
- program requires Windows 3.1 or better". Well, you have a "Setver"
- kind of workaround for such programs in Win95; the [Compatibility]
- section of win.ini. For example, to install Outpost 1.0 on Win95, you
- can edit win.ini so "INSTALL=00020000" instead of 00040000; that
- number is a Windows version reporting number. This will make
- INSTALL.EXE think it's running in Win 3.1. Later on, if the main
- program acts the same way, you can add entries to win.ini with that
- version ID that matches Win 3.1. A handful of entries exist already,
- for known programs.
-
- NOTE: Win95 will restore any changes you make to programs called
- INSTALL or SETUP in the [compatibility] section of win.ini. When you
- make your changes, do them from sysedit, and not from any other file
- editor, then run your installer. Win95 instantly changes the entry
- back to 00040000 after the program finishes installing.
-
- There's a cute utility for real dumb Win 3.1 programs; mkcompat.exe,
- in your Win95 directory. Run this program to turn on compatibility
- switches to make dumb programs work. This is a last resort, and I'd
- rather you insist the program's publisher fix it.
-
- * 3.4.4.1. ...install and run Windows 3.1 on a system now running
- Win95?
-
- If you installed Win95 in a separate directory (You smart person you),
- you can do a very cute trick: Hit Start/Shut Down... and "Restart
- computer in MS-DOS Mode". This will take you straight to a DOS prompt.
- From here, change to your Win 3.1 directory and just type win.
-
- This little trick works because Win95 DOS (DOS 7.0) already loaded the
- necessary himem.sys XMS driver, which is all Win 3.1 really needs to
- load. Performance will be poor, because there's no disk caching active
- at this time, and no fancy network stuff will probably work either,
- because you aren't using Win 3.1's version of IFSHLP. To get these
- working, check out the tricks used to run MS-DOS games and prepare
- special PIF files for, what MS calls, "Single mode MS-DOS". Be
- sure to include the Win 3.1 versions of ifshlp.sys, mscdex, and net
- start, and Win95 versions of other base drivers such as emm386. Also
- include lock c: to let 32-bit disk and file access work.
- * 3.4.4.2. How do I install Win 3.1 fresh in a Win95 system?
-
- First, Shut Down, and Re-start the computer in MS-DOS mode. If you
- have a config.sys or autoexec.bat file (Which you don't need really),
- copy these to a safe place.
-
- Next, insert your Win 3.1 setup disk 1 and run setup.exe from it. This
- performs a normal Win 3.1 or WFWG 3.11 install. When prompted for your
- Windows directory location, be EXTRA CAREFUL to use a different
- directory name than your Win95 installation!!!!!!
-
- Next, let Win 3.1 Setup proceed as normally. When it finishes, copy
- any changed config.sys and autoexec.bat it made up and save them with
- different file names, and restore the previous versions of these
- files.
-
- Next, return to Win95 by typing exit. Look for win.com in the Win 3.1
- directory you installed it in, and right-click on it. Select
- "Properties". Then use the same techniques I mentioned above for
- setting up a special PIF file for Single Mode DOS. This way, you can
- specify a proper Win 3.1 startup sequence and avoid polluting your
- Win95 configuration. You can also use Win 3.1 versions of ifshlp, net,
- and mscdex as required. Now, when you launch this version of win.com
- from Win95, it will re-start your computer using that special
- configuration. When you exit Win 3.1, Win95 re-starts.
- * 3.4.5. ...run MS-DOS apps?
-
- You can either run a DOS session by hitting Start/Programs/MS-DOS
- Prompt and run the DOS program from there, or open it from Explorer.
- If it's a DOS program, Win95 will start a DOS session and load the
- program into it.
-
- NOTE: If you launch a DOS program from Explorer, it will create a PIF
- file for it (Also called a "Shortcut to MS-DOS Program"). If it can't
- write to the directory where the program resides, it will write the
- PIF file to %windir%\pif\.
-
- If you want to avoid making four hundred PIF files, run the MS-DOS
- Prompt first, then run the program within that session. It will use
- the program properties built into the default PIF (dosprmpt.pif)
- instead of making one.
-
- * 3.4.6. ...run MS-DOS utilities? (Xtree (TM), Norton Utilities
- (TM), etc)
-
- Like any other MS-DOS program, but avoid utilities that do direct disk
- writes, like DOS versions of SpeedDisk, Norton Disk Doctor, DiskEdit,
- etc as these won't work in DOS sessions, because Win95 won't let you
- perform direct disk writes in a DOS session.
-
- If you have to run utilities that access the disk directly (like
- sector editors), you must exit to DOS (Restart computer in MS-DOS
- mode) and lock the hard drive you will edit (lock c:). This will allow
- the direct disk access to work.
-
- Utilities to avoid include DOS versions of ScanDisk, Defrag, and all
- their cousins. Win95 comes with Windows version of these utilities
- that work with long filenames etc, and Peter Norton has Win95 versions
- of his utilities, too.
-
- 4.00.950B users should be extra careful not to use any utilities
- designed for previous DOS versions. Period. I don't know enough about
- FAT32 file systems to know what works and what doesn't, so I can't
- make any suggestions here.
-
- * 3.4.7. ...run MS-DOS games?
-
- I go into a whole whack of detail on this subject, but to make life
- real simple, run your games in DOS sessions under Win95, like you
- would any DOS application. A handful of useful Properties settings to
- turn on include, "Protected" (Memory tab), "Prevent DOS programs from
- detecting Windows" (Program tab/Advanced), "Full Screen" (Display),
- and "Always Suspend" (Misc).
-
- DOS games can work with protected mode CD-ROM, sound, and network
- drivers easily. All the real mode hooks are there. Basically, you
- don't need to load any DOS drivers for anything to make a game run.
- This includes CD-ROM games as these are looking for mscdex hooks to
- play CD Audio, and these exist in DOS sessions. One user reported that
- some DOS based Audio CD players won't work, but this is because
- they're trying to directly access a real mode CD-ROM driver rather
- than mscdex. The solution was to use a generic CD Audio player that
- used mscdex instead
-
- For more details, jump to the Running MS-DOS Games section.
-
- * 3.4.8. ...format and copy disks?
-
- Right-click on the floppy drive in "My Computer" and select "Format".
- To copy disks, right-click on the drive and select "Copy..."
-
- Don't forget that right mouse button.
-
- NOTE: Win95's smart enough to stop you from copying the new DMF disks
- (1.8 MB or whatever) and keep you from copying the commercial software
- that comes on it. So don't ask me how to pirate these disks.
-
- * 3.4.9. ...search for files?
-
- Explorer has a nifty file find tool built in. Right-click on where you
- want to start searching and select "Findà ". You could also hit Start
- Menu/Find.
-
- You can search your entire computer (including floppy drives and net
- drives), or a single drive for a file. Type in the filename (or part
- of the filename) and hit Find. Wildcards (*, ?) are permitted but not
- required. Don't forget you're dealing with long filenames now, so keep
- spaces and other non-standard characters in mind. Use filenames in
- quotes (such as "Long file name for my document.doc") if they have
- spaces.
-
- You can search text within files, search for files with certain dates,
- certain sizes, even search for computers on a network. To do this, hit
- the Advanced tab and enter the text you're searching for. You can
- combine the properties of all three tabs to narrow your search and
- reduce searching time.
-
- * 3.4.10. ...add my own items to the Start Menu?
-
- The Start Menu's filled with shortcut files. The easiest way to add an
- item is to drag an icon on top of the Start button. This creates a
- shortcut in the root of the Start Menu.
-
- If you're a bit more selective on where you want to put the shortcut,
- right-click on any open Taskbar space and hit Properties. Select
- "Start Menu Programs" and you can add or remove items. The Shortcut
- Wizard helps you find the item you want to make a shortcut to. For the
- ultimate control over the Start Menu, right-click on the Start button
- and hit Open or Explore, and the drag shortcuts and folders around at
- will.
-
- * 3.4.10.1. The Desktop, Start Menu, and shortcuts
-
- The Desktop and Start Menu are directories on your hard drive, filled
- with .LNK files, or Shortcuts. They may also have regular files in
- them, but Start Menu items have to be .LNK or .PIF files.
-
- If you right-click on the Start button, you can Open the Start Menu
- like any other disk directory and move stuff around.
-
- NOTE on .LNK, .PIF, and .URL files: Win95 hides these extensions
- always, regardless of your "Hide all extensions" settings. If you want
- to change such an extension you'll need to do so from a DOS prompt.
-
- * 3.4.11. ...change my display resolution?
-
- Right-click on any empty Desktop space and select "Properties". You
- can change the wallpaper, screen saver, appearance of windows, and
- display mode. If you change display resolution without changing the
- colour depth, Win95 will re-size the desktop and ask you if it's OK to
- use it. If you change the display's colour depth (like 8-bit to 16-bit
- for example) Win95 will restart.
-
- Many advanced display drivers (such as ATI's DirectX Drivers) will add
- extra tabs to this properties sheet. Take advantage of them. Still
- others (like Diamond's S3 drivers) will let you change display depth
- (number of colours) without rebooting. Unlike Win 3.1 drivers however,
- these utilities use hooks in Win95 set aside by Microsoft for this
- purpose. Get a proper Win95 display driver to take advantage without
- damaging your system.
-
- * 3.4.12. ...change my display driver?
-
- In Display Properties, select the settings tab. Hit the "Change
- Display Type" button. This will let you change the video driver and
- monitor driver.
-
- * 3.4.13. ...disable the "Full window drag" feature of MS Plus?
-
- Microsoft Plus' "Display Enhancements" are a bit of a processor hog.
- You can turn off the Full Window Drag by hitting the "Plus" tab in
- Display Properties, and just turning it off.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 3.5. Some MS-DOS utilities are missing. Where can I get them?
-
- You might be looking for qbasic or some other item from DOS 6 missing
- here. These are available on the CD-ROM version. They're in
- \other\oldmsdos\, and you'll find a batch file that will copy them to
- your %windir%\command\ directory. After a reboot they'll be available.
- You need to reboot because these are direct copies of DOS 6.22
- programs, and the batch file SETVER's them to that version.
-
- If you installed Win95 on top of old DOS, your DOS directory will
- still be in your path, and you can run the old DOS utilities without
- having to install them from the CD-ROM. Setup already added them to
- the SETVER table.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 3.6. Should I buy these new fancy utilities for Win95?
-
- * 3.6.1. ...Norton Navigator (TM) ?
-
- If you used Norton Desktop you'll instantly miss FileAssist and those
- cool toys. I suppose it's OK, but a system running Navigator requires
- more RAM than Win95's Explorer does by itself. Expect additional disk
- swapping after installing this.
-
- New users should just try Explorer for a while first. There's no real
- point to buying a shell extension when you don't know how to use the
- default shell. After all, <soapbox>why would Microsoft spend so much
- time developing this interface, only to have you buy enhancements for
- it?</soapbox> Such shell extenders are really for power users only.
-
- * 3.6.2. ...uninstallers?
-
- A must-have, if you run many old Win 3.1 programs. Make sure you
- obtain a Designed for Windows 95 version; Win 3.1 uninstallers
- don't recognize the Registry, where Win95 stores most of its
- configuration info.
-
- Be very careful of installing Win95 programs with such an uninstaller
- active. Designed for Win95 apps include their own uninstaller, and if
- you use the utility's uninstaller instead of the program's own, the
- uninstaller can remove more than it's supposed to. It could also
- remove less. CleanSweep 95 (TM), for example, warns you to this
- effect. Heed that warning!
-
- The publishers of uninstallers are preying on the fear of new Win95
- users that they HAVE to use a "professional uninstaller" for even
- Designed for 95 apps. Get serious. If a program can't uninstall itself
- it doesn't deserve the logo. Complain to them, or to Microsoft, who
- awarded the logo rights to them.
-
- * 3.6.3. ...anti-virus programs?
-
- Again, Designed for Windows 95 is the key. Otherwise, run the
- anti-virus software outside of Win95.
-
- * 3.6.4. ...Microsoft Plus (TM) ?
-
- Also a must-have, if you have a fast machine. System Agent makes up
- most of the purchase price by itself, running maintenance programs
- like ScanDisk and Defrag unattended.
-
- The other cool stuff that comes with it are for power users only,
- though its web browser will get you started on The Internet with
- minimal fuss. Later on you can install Netscape Navigator or MS
- Internet Explorer 2.0, or even NCSA Mosaic like me, to replace
- this cheap web browser.
-
- 4.00.950B users should turn off the DriveSpace 3 and Internet Tools
- from MS Plus's setup, because the 950B versions are newer (MSIE 3.0
- and DriveSpace 3).
-
- * 3.6.5. ...RAM compression programs?
-
- Yeah right. Build Washboard Abs in three weeks. "I was a 98 pound
- weakling until I installed SoftRAM 95." RAM compression only works
- when there's a defined API for accessing data RAM, as there is a
- defined API for accessing disks, and there is no such thing in Win95.
- At least, there's no way to regulate how the program accesses any RAM
- it allocates.
-
- Save yourself the hundreds of dollars of invested time and buy more
- RAM instead. These programs were great for Win 3.1, where they fixed
- inadequacies in the operating system. Win95 has considerably more
- horsepower by itself, but it thrives on a 16 MB system for running the
- big mainstream apps. MS Works 4.0, however, will run on an 8 MB system
- effortlessly. Try the techniques in Swap file & caching theory to
- speed up the system and run more programs.
-
- If you really need the power to run 100 programs at once, buy a big
- computer and install Windows NT, which will run all the Win95 apps
- anyway. Then you'll have no resource limitations, no swap file
- limitations, in fact, no DOS limitations.
-
- * 3.6.6. ...crash-proofing utilities?
-
- Fear mongering fuels the sales of utilities that promise to keep your
- system crash-proof. Here's my own analysys of some of their claims:
- 1. "Stops programs from crashing so you can save your work." OK, I
- can buy this one. Only trouble is, what state is your work in
- during mid-crash?
- 2. "Warns you in advance of HD failures." So can ScanDisk if you run
- it daily (Buy MS Plus for 1/2 the price of some of these utilities
- and get a lot more!)
- 3. "Takes the risk out of adding new programs and cards." So does the
- Designed for Windows 95 logo. Speaking of which, how many of
- these crash-proofing utilities bear the logo? I can count them
- without any fingers. :-)
- 4. "Your personal 24-hour a day expert." Just read this FAQ and
- others.
-
- I can also refute a lot of these claims with two words: "Broken
- Computer." If your computer is in such a state that it's constantly
- crashing, your HD's failing, and you can't add new cards or software,
- it's probably broken. A visit to your service centre with warranty
- slip in hand will probably cost a lot less than one of these packages.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 3.7. Top ten mistakes running Windows 3.x programs
-
- 10. Installing a Win 3.1 uninstaller
-
- 9. Installing a Win 3.1 communications program (replacing Win95
- COMM.DRV)
-
- 8. Installing a Win 3.1 utility pack
-
- 7. USING a Win 3.1 utility pack
-
- 6. Installing a Win 3.1 app that replaces core system files
-
- 5. Installing a Win 3.1 backup program, especially since Win95 backup
- programs are here for FREE
-
- 4. Installing Norton Desktop for Win 3.1 and expecting it to work
-
- 3. Installing a RAM compression program for Win95
-
- 2. Installing a RAM compression program for Win 3.1
-
- 1. USING a RAM compression program for Win 3.1
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Subject: 3.8. Top ten mistakes running MS-DOS programs and games
-
- 10. Loading ctmmsys.sys (SB16 driver) in Win95 because a game manual
- said to do it
-
- 9. Loading mscdex.exe in Win95 because a game manual said to do it
-
- 8. Making a boot disk before realizing how .PIF files work, because a
- game manual said to do it
-
- (I think you get it by now)
-
- 7. Installing QEMM 8.0 (or any version) just because you can't get one
- game to work
-
- 6. Adding emm386.exe to config.sys before learning how PIF files work
-
- 5. Letting a "techie" friend add emm386.exe (or any other real mode
- driver)
-
- 4. Letting a "techie" friend make your game work before he reads this
- FAQ
-
- 3. Running Norton SpeedDisk 6.0 and forgetting you have long filenames
- now!
-
- 2. Making a boot disk for a game before seeing the "Prevent DOS
- programs from detecting Windows" switch, or before specifying a
- special DOS config for that program
-
- 1. Running Win95 with a host of DOS drivers and memory managers.
-
- (Get Win95 drivers for your stuff and make Win95 perform like Win95!)
-
- --
- ==============================================================================
- = I am Gordon of Winterpeg. Junk mail is futile. Post MakeMoneyFast =
- = Find out why: http://spam.abuse.net/spam/ Or eat pink meat from a can =
- = World's best computer: http://www.amiga.de/ they're both the same =
- = Windows 95 FAQ: http://www.orca.bc.ca/win95/ http://ga.to/mmf/ =
- ==============================================================================
-
-