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- OS/2 Frequently Asked Questions
- Release 1.9; December 4, 1991
- Compiled by Timothy F. Sipples
-
- For changes/suggestions/additions please mail sip1@quads.uchicago.edu.
- Include subject line "OS/2 FAQ." This List may be freely distributed.
- The mention of a product does not constitute an endorsement. Answers to
- questions closer to the bottom of the List may rely on information given
- in prior answers. Customers outside North America should not rely on
- 800 telephone numbers or certain part numbers contained in this List.
-
- Release Notes: A new question (35) has been added. Questions 4, 7, 8,
- 9, 11, 12, 13, 22, 23, and 26 have been revised.
-
- Questions Addressed in this Release:
-
- (1) What is OS/2?
- (2) What are the differences between versions?
- (3) What is the difference between Standard and Extended Edition?
- (4) What about DOS and Windows compatibility?
- (5) Where can I buy OS/2?
- (6) How much does OS/2 cost?
- (7) Can I upgrade to IBM OS/2 1.3 SE from DOS?
- (8) Can I upgrade to IBM OS/2 1.3 SE from an older version?
- (9) If I buy IBM OS/2 1.3 now, how much will it cost to get 2.0?
- (10) Does IBM offer educational discounts on purchases of OS/2? Site
- licenses?
- (11) What hardware do I need to run IBM OS/2 1.3 SE?
- (12) What applications are available for OS/2 1.x?
- (13) Where can I obtain OS/2 freeware and shareware?
- (14) My Logitech mouse doesn't seem to be working with OS/2. What's
- wrong?
- (15) Is there a driver available for my SCSI adapter?
- (16) How about a high resolution driver for my video adapter?
- (17) How about a driver for my printer?
- (18) How do I access HPFS partitions on my hard drive without booting
- from the hard drive? I've done something (like changing
- CONFIG.SYS) that doesn't let me boot OS/2.
- (19) I can't install OS/2 from Drive B. What's wrong?
- (20) Is there a Norton Utilities for OS/2?
- (21) Sometimes Presentation Manager will freeze when I run an
- application, and I have to reboot. What's wrong?
- (22) My dealer doesn't know OS/2 from Unix. How can I get answers to
- my OS/2 questions?
- (23) How can I get ahold of the beta release of OS/2 2.0?
- (24) Why should I use HPFS? What does it offer me? Does it work with
- DOS?
- (25) I'm a Unix wizard. How do I make OS/2 resemble Unix?
- (26) I would like to set up an OS/2 BBS. What is available?
- (27) The printed and online manuals do not document REXX in any detail.
- Where can I obtain more information?
- (28) Doesn't OS/2 have applets like Windows? I miss Solitaire.
- (29) How do I redirect printer output to a file?
- (30) Can I use COM3 and COM4 in OS/2?
- (31) On my 1024x768 high resolution display I get obnoxiously large
- icons (64x64). How do I make them smaller?
- (32) How do I start a background process from the OS/2 command line?
- (33) How do I start a DOS application from a PM icon?
- (34) What are CSDs, how do I tell which I have, and where do I get
- them?
- (35) How do I add the Paste option to the system menus of windowed,
- non-PM applications?
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- (1) What is OS/2?
-
- OS/2 is an advanced operating system for PCs and PS/2s with an 80286
- processor or better. It was codeveloped by Microsoft and IBM and
- envisioned as the successor to DOS.
-
- It was designed from the ground up with multitasking and multithreading
- in mind. It also protects applications from one another (a single
- misbehaved program will not typically bring down the entire system),
- supports up to 16 MB of physical RAM, and supplies virtual memory to
- applications as requested.
-
- As shipped, it does not support multiuser operation, although several
- third parties have grafted multiuser (character mode) capabilities onto
- the base operating system. Citrix, OS2YOU, Remote-OS, and Polymod are
- four such products. Remote-OS is published by The Software Lifeline,
- tel. 407-994-4466, and OS2YOU is available from the OS/2
- shareware/freeware sources (see Question 13). [Other products'
- contacts?]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (2) What are the differences between versions?
-
- IBM OS/2 Version 2.0 was formally announced at Fall Comdex and will be
- available with promised features in December, 1991, on a limited basis,
- and in full retail release with "seamless Windows" support and other
- extra features in March, 1992. Version 2.0 will run only on machines
- with an 80386SX processor or better. IBM is (now) developing 2.0
- independently but is involving third party PC manufacturers in its
- testing. Improvements will include the ability to preemptively
- multitask DOS, Windows 2.x, and Windows 3.x (standard mode) applications
- (without purchasing any of these environments) in separate, robust,
- protected sessions; an object-oriented WorkPlace shell (including a
- "shredder" icon); a multiple operating system boot mechanism; 32-bit
- programming interfaces; support for more than 16 MB of RAM; and more
- third party device drivers. It will also provide EMS 3.2/4.0 and
- XMS/DPMI 1.0 (expanded and extended memory) services to DOS and Windows
- applications. Version 2.0 will demand a minimum of 3 MB of RAM. See
- Question 4 for more information on OS/2 2.0.
-
- IBM OS/2 Version 1.3 (CSD Level 05016; see Question 34) is currently the
- latest commercially available release. This version distinguishes
- itself with built-in Adobe Type Manager and reduced memory requirements.
- Procedures Language/2 (a.k.a. REXX), a powerful batch-oriented
- programming language, became a part of Standard Edition with this
- release. (A few OEMs are shipping Microsoft OS/2 Version 1.3, but
- Microsoft has all but abandoned OS/2 development.)
-
- OS/2 Version 1.2 was the first to incorporate the High Performance File
- System (HPFS, which supports long file names). With this release IBM
- OS/2 added a dual boot mechanism and IBM Extended Edition introduced
- REXX.
-
- OS/2 Version 1.1 was the first to include the Presentation Manager (PM)
- GUI/API, now an integral part of the operating system. Microsoft OEM
- versions added a dual boot mechanism with this release.
-
- OS/2 Version 1.0, introduced in 1987, was the first release of OS/2.
- Task switching was accomplished through a character-based shell and
- limited DOS compatibility was provided.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (3) What is the difference between Standard and Extended Edition?
-
- IBM makes this marketing distinction between two different flavors of
- OS/2 1.x. OS/2 1.x is available either in its Standard Edition (SE,
- i.e. the base operating system) or in Extended Edition (EE, with several
- extra bundled software products including the Communications Manager and
- the Database Manager). EE includes enhanced mainframe, network, and
- communications support.
-
- The distinction will change slightly when OS/2 2.0 is released. IBM
- will upgrade EE features and drop LAN Requester from the package, to be
- renamed Extended Services (ES). LAN Requester will be included in IBM's
- OS/2 LAN Server product. The new ES 2.0 will still work with OS/2 1.3
- and will be tested on a wide variety of PC compatibles. ES 2.1 will
- likely contain 32-bit code.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (4) What about DOS and Windows compatibility?
-
- All 1.x versions of OS/2 include optional the DOS compatibility mode
- (sometimes called the penalty box) which allows a single, well-behaved
- DOS application to run alongside multiple OS/2 applications. The DOS
- application stops running when the user switches to an OS/2 program.
- However, OS/2 programs will run in the background while a DOS program is
- running.
-
- IBM OS/2 Version 1.3 SE yields approximately 520K free memory in the DOS
- box. Windows 3.0 will run in real mode in the DOS box. Also, DOS may
- be started by itself (in native mode) in two ways: by using the dual
- boot mechanism in OS/2 (described in detail in the printed manual) or by
- booting from a floppy disk. In both cases DOS has access to all FAT
- (non-HPFS) partitions on the hard disk (that are not themselves preceded
- by a HPFS or other "foreign" partition).
-
- Version 2.0 will preemptively multitask DOS and Windows (real and
- standard mode) applications in separate, protected sessions. (Windows
- enhanced mode features, i.e. DOS multitasking and demand paging of
- memory, will be provided by OS/2 2.0 directly.) Windows applications
- will be well integrated into the overall OS/2 PM environment with DDE
- and Clipboard hooks, and OLE 1.0 will be supported between Windows
- applications. The "seamless Windows" support planned for March, 1992,
- means that Windows applications will run alongside other applications on
- the Presentation Manager desktop. Each DOS application will have up to
- roughly 640K conventional memory available. OS/2 2.0 will also provide
- up to 32 MB of EMS 3.2 or 4.0, 16 MB of XMS, and/or 512 MB of DPMI 1.0
- for each DOS or Windows application out of its pool of physical and/or
- virtual memory. DOS applications which utilize DOS extenders will run
- so long as the extender is DPMI compliant. DOS applications can run
- either full screen or in PM windows. Windowed DOS applications will be
- able to use text mode or any graphics mode up to the resolution of the
- desktop. DOS and Windows device drivers will work with DOS and Windows
- applications running under OS/2 2.0, but if an OS/2 2.0 driver is
- available a DOS or Windows device driver is unnecessary.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (5) Where can I buy OS/2?
-
- Microsoft versions of OS/2 are available only through OEMs (e.g. Compaq,
- Dell).
-
- IBM OS/2 Version 1.3 is available from any authorized IBM dealer
- (although persistence helps) or directly from IBM (tel. 800-3 IBM OS2).
- IBM OS/2 1.3 SE on 5.25 inch disks is IBM part no. 84F7587. For 3.5
- inch disks ask for part no. 84F7588. Media are high density.
- Corresponding EE part nos. are 15F7196 and 15F7195.
-
- IBM OS/2 Version 1.3 is also available from several mail order sources,
- including Egghead Discount Software (tel. 800-344-4323) and Elek-Tek
- (tel. 708-677-7660).
-
- IBM plans to make OS/2 2.0 available everywhere DOS is purchased, to
- bundle 2.0 with new systems, and to offer free or discounted upgrades
- depending on the product replaced (DOS, Windows, or OS/2 1.x).
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (6) How much does OS/2 cost?
-
- IBM OS/2 Version 1.3 SE retails for USD 150. IBM will offer OS/2 2.0
- for USD 195 retail.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (7) Can I upgrade to IBM OS/2 1.3 SE from DOS?
-
- Yes, as long as you are upgrading from IBM PC-DOS. The upgrade retails
- for USD 99. Part numbers are 85S1656 for 5.25 inch media and 85S1657
- for 3.5 media.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (8) Can I upgrade to IBM OS/2 1.3 SE from an older version?
-
- Yes, as long as the previous version is an IBM version. There is a 99
- USD charge for this upgrade. Licensees may wish to wait for the free
- upgrade to OS/2 2.0 that IBM plans to make available.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (9) If I buy IBM OS/2 1.3 now, how much will it cost to get 2.0?
-
- All IBM OS/2 1.x licensees upgrading to OS/2 2.0 before July 31, 1992,
- will pay nothing. Version 1.x EE licensees will receive the full 2.0 ES
- upgrade. IBM reserves the right to revise or add to these terms.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (10) Does IBM offer educational discounts on purchases of OS/2? Site
- licenses?
-
- IBM has both. The educational price is approximately USD 99 for OS/2
- 1.3 SE. SE also comes in non-media (manual and license only) packages
- at a reduced price, part no. 84F8528. An SE additional license
- (entitles holder to make one copy of media and manual) is part no.
- 15F1655; EE, 15F7201.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (11) What hardware do I need to run IBM OS/2 1.3 SE?
-
- You need a PC, PC compatible, or PS/2 with at least an 80286 CPU, 2 MB
- or more of RAM (configured as 640K base plus the remainder as extended
- memory), a 20 MB or larger hard disk, a supported video adapter (CGA,
- EGA, VGA, MCGA, 8514/A, XGA, or third party driver) with appropriate
- display, and a high density 3.5 or 5.25 inch floppy drive for
- installation. A mouse is recommended.
-
- PM will not operate with the Monochrome Display Adapter or the Hercules
- Monochrome Graphics Adapter. Usually PM will fail to work with
- monochrome EGA. However, some EGA adapters (e.g. Paradise Monochrome
- EGA Card, ATI EGA Wonder) will emulate all color EGA modes on TTL
- monochrome monitors and, thus, will work with PM. "Autoswitching" on
- non-IBM EGA adapters and "shadow RAM" should be disabled (usually with a
- DIP switch or jumper setting).
-
- On ISA bus machines, OS/2 supports 16-bit hard drive adapters which
- conform to the Western Digital chipset interface standard (i.e. nearly
- all MFM, RLL, IDE, and ESDI adapters). An adapter capable of sector
- remapping should be used (and enabled) with hard drives larger than 1024
- cylinders. (The 1024 cylinder limit is a BIOS constraint.)
-
- IBM OS/2 1.3 is directly compatible with IBM's Microchannel SCSI
- adapters and attached devices. Question 15 discusses third party SCSI
- compatibility, including CD-ROM issues. Irwin (tel. 800-348-6242)
- manufactures OS/2 compatible tape backup systems. [More tape backup
- systems and Bernoulli information?]
-
- Supported printers include the Hewlett-Packard LaserJet family; IBM
- ExecJets, Proprinters, Quickwriters, Quietwriters, Pageprinters, and
- Laserprinters; Epson dot matrix printers; Postscript devices; and other
- printers compatible with these families. A variety of IBM and HP
- plotters is also supported. If difficulties are encountered in printing
- make sure the printer port generates interrupts and does not conflict
- with other installed devices. Also make sure that a high quality, fully
- wired cable is used. IBM PS/2 Models 90 and 95 must have their parallel
- printer ports set to compatibility mode using the setup disk.
-
- IBM OS/2 1.3 runs on a wide array of clones with a wide variety of
- hardware. However, compatibility cannot be assured with every non-IBM
- device. Often problems can be fixed with a BIOS upgrade or an OS/2 CSD
- (see Question 34; for example, CSD 05016 for IBM OS/2 1.3 fixes a
- problem involving the loss of CMOS setup information on certain PC
- compatibles). Version 2.0 will, however, be officially tested and
- supported on a wide variety of non-IBM equipment, including machines
- manufactured by Acer, ALR, Apricot, Arche, AST, AT&T, Blackship, Club
- American, Compaq, CompuAdd, CSS Labs, DEC, Dell, Dolch, Epson, Everex,
- Hertz, Hewlett-Packard, Intel, Logix, Memorex, NCR, NEC, Netframe,
- Northgate, Olivetti, Panasonic, Parallan, Reply, Siemens, Tandon,
- Tandy/Grid, Tatung, Tricord, Toshiba, Twinhead, and Wyse. The number of
- supported peripherals and displays will also increase substantially.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (12) What applications are available for OS/2 1.x?
-
- They number in the low thousands at present and include applications
- from almost every category imaginable. Some are character based
- applications; some are PM based.
-
- DOS applications with OS/2 counterparts include Lotus 1-2-3 (both
- character and PM), Freelance, Microsoft Word (both character and PM),
- Excel, Multiplan, Aldus Pagemaker, Ventura Publisher, Corel Draw,
- WordPerfect, DisplayWrite, AutoCAD, Oracle, RBase, PC SAS, SPSS,
- HyperAccess/5, DynaComm, Pro-YAM, Borland Sidekick, Paradox, Wingz,
- Brief, QEdit, and many others. In some cases DOS and OS/2 versions ship
- together (e.g. Microsoft Word 5.5, Lotus 1-2-3 3.0, Wingz). Utilities
- include PKZIP/UNZIP, SEA's ARC, LHA, Zoo 2.1, GNU tools, tens of
- different file finders, desktop clocks, calculators, and many more.
- Programming languages include Assembler, C++, COBOL, Pascal, C, Fortran,
- BASIC, REXX, Smalltalk, Modula-2, and still more.
-
- The IBM NSC BBS (tel. 404-835-6600) provides an online product database
- of hardware and software compatible with OS/2. A directory of OS/2
- applications, IBM document number G362-0029-00, is published by Graphics
- Plus, tel. 800-READ-OS2.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (13) Where can I obtain OS/2 freeware and shareware?
-
- Many BBSes hold large OS/2 libraries. Fernwood (tel. 203-483-0348) has
- over 50 MB worth. The OS/2 Shareware BBS (tel. 703-385-0931) and the
- Windows & OS/2 Magazine BBS (tel. 805-684-0589, fee req.) carry still
- more. The IBM NSC BBS has some shareware/freeware as well, along with
- CSDs (see Question 34) and the PS/2 Assistant (an invaluable resource
- for locating almost any sort of information on OS/2). The Usenet
- conference comp.binaries.os2 carries OS/2 software. And several sites
- are available via anonymous ftp. (No ftp? Send a single line message
- with the word HELP to bitftp@pucc.bitnet to learn about Princeton's ftp
- mail server.) They include (with Internet node numbers and
- subdirectories):
-
- mtsg.ubc.ca 137.82.27.1 os2:
- luga.latrobe.edu.au 131.172.2.2 pub/os2
- msdos.archive.umich.edu 141.211.164.153 msdos/os2
- funic.funet.fi 128.214.6.100 pub/os2
- novell.com 130.57.4.1 os2
-
- The last site should not be accessed weekdays between 8:00 a.m. and 5:30
- p.m. Pacific Time.
-
- Other sources include CompuServe ("GO IBMOS2") and the Bitnet/EARN site
- BLEKUL11 (send a single line message with the word HELP to
- LISTSERV@BLEKUL11.BITNET for more information).
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (14) My Logitech mouse doesn't seem to be working with OS/2. What's
- wrong?
-
- The Logitech Series 7 and 9 serial mice work with the Mouse Systems PC
- Mouse driver; all other Logitech serial mice, the Microsoft Serial Mouse
- driver; bus mice, the Microsoft Bus Mouse (199) driver; PS/2 mice, the
- IBM PS/2 Mouse driver.
-
- Conflicts can arise with OS/2 and native DOS/Windows. The complete
- Logitech technical bulletin on OS/2, from which the above information
- was obtained, is required reading for users experiencing problems. It
- is available from the Logitech Support BBS, tel. 415-795-0408.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (15) Is there a driver available for my SCSI adapter?
-
- SCSI support has improved dramatically in the past few months. Users
- should make sure, however, that driver support extends to multiple SCSI
- devices, including CD-ROM, tape backup, and both primary (bootable) and
- secondary (nonbootable) hard disk drives in both FAT and HPFS
- configurations. Such extensive support is still rare.
-
- Columbia Data Products (tel. 407-869-6700, BBS tel. 407-862-4724)
- supplies or plans to supply OS/2 1.3 device drivers for numerous third
- party SCSI adapters, including some of the products mentioned below.
- Support may be limited to a choice of one primary SCSI hard disk drive,
- or one or more secondary SCSI hard disk drives.
-
- Adaptec (tel. 408-945-2550, BBS tel. 408-945-7727) provides OS/2 1.x
- support for FAT hard disk drives attached to its line of ISA SCSI
- adapters. Always Technologies makes an OS/2 1.x driver available on its
- BBS (tel. 818-597-0275) for its IN-2000 ISA SCSI adapter. At present
- the driver supports secondary hard disk drives only. Bustek (tel. 408-
- 259-6237) has OS/2 1.x and 2.0 (beta) drivers for both FAT and HPFS hard
- disk drives attached to its BT-742A EISA SCSI adapter. CE Infosys (tel.
- 703-435-3800) has OS/2 1.x support largely in place for its Microchannel
- and ISA SCSI adapters and is committed to future enhancements. DTC/Qume
- (tel. 408-262-7700, BBS tel. 408-942-4197) supports OS/2 1.x on its 3280
- ISA SCSI adapter. Both FAT and HPFS hard disk drives are supported, but
- secondary drives cannot coexist with a primary drive. Future Domain
- (tel. 714-253-0400) provides an OS/2 1.x driver with its MCS-700
- Microchannel SCSI adapter that supports up to six FAT or HPFS hard disk
- drives. Hard disk drive support is also available for its 1660 and 1670
- ISA SCSI adapters. Western Digital (tel. 714-863-0102, BBS tel. 714-
- 753-1234) offers OS/2 1.3 driver support with its 7000 FAAST ISA SCSI
- adapter for both FAT and HPFS hard disk drives. Seagate (BBS tel. 408-
- 438-8771) has chosen not to supply an OS/2 driver for its ST-01/02 ISA
- SCSI adapters.
-
- Corel Systems (publisher of Corel Draw, tel. 613-728-8200) supplies OS/2
- compatible CD-ROM (and rewritable) systems.
-
- IBM OS/2 2.0 should include direct support for many third party SCSI
- adapters and devices.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (16) How about a high resolution driver for my video adapter?
-
- In many cases an up-to-date OS/2 driver is available. If not, a driver
- for an older version of OS/2 may work. If all else fails, standard VGA
- must suffice.
-
- Drivers are available directly from the manufacturer of the video
- adapter or, in many cases, through the shareware/freeware sources listed
- above. Orchid (based on Tseng Labs chips) and Trident (among others)
- have released high resolution drivers for OS/2 1.3; ATI has not. Most
- OS/2 2.0 features will be available using an OS/2 1.3 display driver.
- DOS and Windows programs running under OS/2 2.0 will work with their own
- device drivers as well as with any OS/2-supported device.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (17) How about a driver for my printer?
-
- If your printer is not compatible with one of the drivers supplied with
- OS/2, check with the printer manufacturer first then with the IBM NSC
- BBS. For example, a Hewlett-Packard LaserJet III driver for IBM OS/2
- 1.3 is now available on the NSC BBS. If you own an IBM printer, check
- with the Lexmark BBS (tel. 606-232-5653).
-
- Non-PM applications may supply their own printer drivers, and text only
- output is always an option.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (18) How do I access HPFS partitions on my hard drive without booting
- from the hard drive? I've done something (like changing
- CONFIG.SYS) that doesn't let me boot OS/2.
-
- With IBM's OS/2, insert the Installation Diskette in Drive A and reboot.
- When the logo appears on screen, press ESC. You will be given an OS/2
- command line prompt.
-
- Make sure you backup CONFIG.SYS before making any changes so that you
- can easily revert to the old version should things go wrong.
-
- Incidently, you may use this method to run CHKDSK on your OS/2 boot
- partition. After obtaining the OS/2 command line prompt, remove the
- Installation Diskette and insert Diskette 1. Type CHKDSK C: /F to
- repair damage to the boot partition.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (19) I can't install OS/2 from Drive B. What's wrong?
-
- IBM OS/2 can only be installed from Drive A. If you have the wrong disk
- size go back to your dealer and obtain the correct media. Otherwise you
- could go inside your machine and swap floppy drive cable connectors, use
- your system's setup utility to set the new CMOS parameters, and then
- install OS/2 from the new Drive A. Sometimes the floppy drive cable
- connectors will not be the same. If so you can use the DOS program
- FDFORMAT (available via anonymous ftp from wsmr-simtel20.army.mil,
- directory pd1:<msdos.dskutl>) to create 1.44 MB (80 tracks, 18 sectors
- per track) 5.25 inch disks. As before, reset your CMOS parameters to
- fool your machine into thinking the 5.25 inch drive is actually a high
- density 3.5 inch drive, DISKCOPY the diskettes, and install.
-
- IBM is working to make the install process friendlier in future releases
- of OS/2.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (20) Is there a Norton Utilities for OS/2?
-
- Not yet. But the GammaTech Utilities should fill the role with UnDelete
- and other programs. Contact their publisher at tel. 405-359-1219.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (21) Sometimes Presentation Manager will freeze when I run an
- application, and I have to reboot. What's wrong?
-
- Often the problem can be traced to the DOS box. If at all possible,
- upgrade to true OS/2 applications. OS/2 1.x provides far more
- protection in native mode.
-
- PM has some protection of its own. It can trap applications that do not
- respond to input, but you have to give it a chance. Press CTRL-ESC (to
- attempt to bring up the Task Manager), then wait up to a full minute
- before rebooting (without moving the mouse or pressing any other keys);
- a dialog box may appear with further instructions.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (22) My dealer doesn't know OS/2 from Unix. How can I get answers to
- my OS/2 questions?
-
- If your question is not answered in this FAQ List, post a note to the
- appropriate Usenet conference: comp.os.os2.apps carries discussions
- related to finding or using any OS/2 application, comp.os.os2.programmer
- addresses anything related to OS/2 programming, and comp.os.os2.misc is
- for any other OS/2-related discussion. These groups are watched closely
- by IBM's OS/2 development team. BLEKUL11 (on Bitnet/EARN) distributes
- its own OS/2 conference by mail; send a single line message with the
- word HELP to LISTSERV@BLEKUL11.BITNET for full instructions.
-
- Your local FidoNet BBS may carry the OS/2 echo conference. If not, ask
- your system operator to get ahold of it. CompuServe ("GO IBMOS2") is
- also an excellent source of information.
-
- The IBM NSC BBS was established as a support forum. That BBS's message
- areas, product database, and PS/2 Assistant file(s) are invaluable
- resources. And the company has launched an OS/2 hotline (tel. 800-342-
- 6672) for user inquiries and orders. (Ask about the OS/2 T-shirts and
- videocassettes.)
-
- OS/2 has its own magazine as well. To subscribe to IBM Personal Systems
- Developer, a quarterly publication, telephone 407-982-1105.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (23) How can I get ahold of the beta release of OS/2 2.0?
-
- Members of the Early Experience Program and certified developers can
- receive OS/2 2.0 beta. Details on program enrollment are available
- through both the IBM NSC BBS and the Hotline. Residents outside North
- America should contact local IBM branches for specific information on
- availability of OS/2 2.0 beta. The IBM NSC BBS may, in the future, stop
- taking orders for OS/2 2.0 beta.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (24) Why should I use HPFS? What does it offer me? Does it work with
- DOS?
-
- HPFS offers long file names (greatly exceeding the "8 dot 3" limit in
- FAT/DOS file systems) and speedier disk operation, particularly on large
- hard disks. HPFS is not case sensitive, although it does preserve case
- in file names.
-
- However, HPFS is not currently supported on removable media, although
- some programs (e.g. BACKUP) preserve long file names on such FAT disks.
- Also, native mode DOS cannot access a HPFS partition. However, the DOS
- compatibility box "sees" all files that conform to the "8 dot 3" naming
- conventions, even if they are stored on HPFS volumes.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (25) I'm a Unix wizard. How do I make OS/2 resemble Unix?
-
- A great number of GNU and other standard Unix utilities have been ported
- to OS/2 native mode and are available from the shareware/freeware
- sources listed above. A uucp package, UUPC/Extended, is available via
- anonymous ftp from sun.soe.clarkson.edu, directory pub/uupc; netmail
- help@kew.com with questions.
-
- In addition, the Hamilton C Shell is available from Hamilton Labs, tel.
- 508-358-5715 or netmail 3890321@mcimail.com. The Thompson Toolkit, a
- Bourne-like shell, is published by Thompson Automation, tel. 206-224-
- 1639. Thompson offers a version of awk as well. MKS (tel. 519-884-2251
- or netmail pat@mks.com) publishes a number of standard Unix utilities
- for OS/2. TCP/IP support is available from IBM (and no longer requires
- EE) or FTP Software (send netmail to info@ftp.com). [BSD shell?]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (26) I would like to set up an OS/2 BBS. What is available?
-
- Many packages are available from the shareware/freeware sources listed
- above. OS/2 is an excellent environment for BBS operation, including
- large multiline facilities. Related software will enable FidoNet
- capabilities, gateways to Usenet/UUCP, nodelist processing, additional
- file transfer protocols, and more.
-
- Four popular OS/2 BBSes are Maximus and Simplex (available from
- shareware/freeware sources), Omega Point/2 (BBS tel. 404-564-1961), and
- Multi-Net (tel. 503-883-8099, BBS tel. 503-883-8197).
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (27) The printed and online manuals do not document REXX in any detail.
- Where can I obtain more information?
-
- IBM publishes two separate manuals:
-
- "IBM Operating System/2 Procedures Language 2/REXX User's Guide," Part
- No. 01F0272, Document No. S01F-0272; and
-
- "IBM Operating System/2 Procedures Language 2/REXX Reference," Part No.
- 01F0271, Document No. S01F-0271.
-
- An alternative is "The REXX Language: A Practical Guide to Programming
- (2nd Ed.)" by Mike Cowlishaw, Prentice Hall, ISBN 0-13-780651-5.
-
- In addition, there are at least two different versions of REXX online
- references available from one or more of the shareware/freeware sources
- listed above.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (28) Doesn't OS/2 have applets like Windows? I miss Solitaire.
-
- All the Windows applets have been ported to OS/2. The package is called
- Windows Libraries for OS/2 (WLO) Version 1.0. They should be available
- from CompuServe and from some of the shareware/freeware sites listed
- above. IBM OS/2 2.0 will ship with several applets.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (29) How do I redirect printer output to a file?
-
- The Postscript printer driver has a built-in option for printing to a
- file. Navigate through the PM Print Manager configuration options to
- access this feature.
-
- For all other drivers, first hold (pause) the Print Manager queue then
- print from the application. The output file will be located below the
- SPOOL subdirectory. COPY the file elsewhere then cancel the job from
- the Print Manager.
-
- (These methods assume the IBM Print Manager (spooler) is installed and
- active.)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (30) Can I use COM3 and COM4 in OS/2?
-
- IBM OS/2 1.x ships with a driver that supports COM3 on Microchannel
- PS/2s only. However, the Fernwood BBS (and perhaps other sites) carries
- a replacement driver which supports COM3 and/or COM4 on ISA bus
- machines. This driver also supports speeds greater than 19,200 bits per
- second. Ports must not share interrupts on ISA bus machines, however.
- Fernwood also carries files that describe patches to the stock
- communications driver to enable certain features.
-
- "Smart" (coprocessor controlled) multiport communication adapters should
- be used when installing more than four ports. Such an adapter will work
- with OS/2 if the manufacturer has written an appropriate driver.
- Examples include IBM's own ARTIC products.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (31) On my 1024x768 high resolution display I get obnoxiously large
- icons (64x64). How do I make them smaller?
-
- Patch the display driver file, DISPLAY.DLL, using a program like DOS's
- DEBUG. Search for the byte sequence 40 00 40 00 20 00 20 00
- (hexadecimal) (sometimes the sequence is 28 00 28 00 20 00 20 00) and
- change it to 20 00 20 00 20 00 20 00.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (32) How do I start a background process from the OS/2 command line?
-
- Look up the START and DETACH commands in the online reference.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (33) How do I start a DOS application from a PM icon?
-
- In IBM OS/2 1.3 DOS applications can be started from a PM program group
- icon just like native OS/2 and PM programs (assuming the OS/2 CONFIG.SYS
- file contains the lines DEVICE=...\DOS.SYS and PROTECTONLY=NO).
-
- From the PM desktop go to a program group and select New. Enter the DOS
- program's title (e.g. "Lotus 1-2-3"), the path to the program (to an
- EXE, COM, or BAT file, e.g. "C:\Lotus\Lotus.Exe"), and any optional
- parameters like command line options and/or the DOS application's
- working directory (e.g. "C:\Lotus"). Select the Add button, and PM will
- create a DOS icon with that application's name in the program group.
- These parameters may be altered by highlighting the icon and selecting
- Properties. Double clicking on that application's icon will cause OS/2
- to switch to the DOS compatibility box and start the application.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (34) What are CSDs, how do I tell which I have, and where do I get
- them?
-
- CSDs are Corrective Service Diskettes, or bug fixes, periodically issued
- by IBM. The OS/2 CSD level number may be obtained using the command
- SYSLEVEL from the OS/2 command line prompt. CSDs are cumulative, i.e.
- only the most recent CSD is required to bring a system up from any
- previous CSD level. However, CSDs only apply within a major version
- number. For example, a full upgrade, not a CSD, would bring OS/2
- Version 1.2 up to Version 1.3. Note also that SE CSDs are not the same
- as EE CSDs.
-
- CSDs may be ordered by anyone with an IBM customer number (usually large
- sites) directly from IBM (tel. 800-237-5511). OS/2 users without
- customer numbers should ask an authorized IBM dealer to order the CSD.
- Many dealers do not know about this program, so be persistent. CSDs may
- also be downloaded from the IBM NSC BBS or CompuServe ("GO IBMOS2").
-
- ------------------------------
-
- (35) How do I add the Paste option to the system menus of windowed,
- non-PM applications?
-
- In OS/2 1.3, start a windowed text mode application (e.g. the OS/2
- Window command line). Bring up the system menu with SHIFT-ESC. Use the
- down arrow key (not the mouse) to highlight Mark. Press SHIFT-ENTER.
- Paste will then appear in system menus.
-
- --
- Timothy F. Sipples sip1@ellis.uchicago.edu
- (Keeper of the OS/2 FAQ List, avail. via anonymous Department of Economics
- ftp from 130.57.4.1, directory "os2/faq") Univ. of Chicago 60637
-