วันอาทิตย์ที่ 8 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2550

Install operation

The Foolproof Way To Install Windows 98:
1. Get a Windows Startup Disk. To make one, on a running 98 system.
2. In your BIOS make sure your boot order is set to boot from floppy before the hard drive.
3. Insert Startup disk - start system - and answer 'Start Without CD-ROM Support' when prompted.
4. If you have multiple drives, you will want to make sure that you are on the correct current fixed disk drive, and switch it if necessary.
5. Create a Primary DOS partition and make it bootable.
6. Once FDISK is done it will tell you to reboot for changes.
7. Boot to BIOS, set the system boot order to boot from CD if you want to try a direct CD installation.
8. For CD Install: Insert Windows CD, remove floppy from drive and exit BIOS Good luck, system should start Windows install by formatting your drive.

Opuration system 2

Operating systems

1.Operating system ABCs
An Operating System, or OS, is a software program that enables the computer hardware to communicate and operate with the computer software. Without a computer Operating System, a computer would be useless.



2.Operating system types
As computers have progressed and developed so have the types of operating systems. Below is a basic list of the different types of operating systems and a few examples of Operating Systems that fall into each of the categories. Many computer Operating Systems will fall into more than one of the below categories.

Opuration system

An operating system (OS) is a set of computer programs that manage the hardware and software resources of a computer. An operating system processes raw system and user input and responds by allocating and managing tasks and internal system resources as a service to users and programs of the system. At the foundation of all system software, an operating system performs basic tasks such as controlling and allocating memory, prioritizing system requests, controlling input and output devices, facilitating networking and managing file systems. Most operating systems come with an application that provides an interface to the OS managed resources. These applications have had command line interpreters as a basic user interface but, since the mid-1980s, have been implemented as a graphical user interface (GUI) for ease of operation. Operating Systems themselves have no user interfaces; the user of an OS is an application, not a person. The operating system forms a platform for other system software and for application software. Windows, Linux, and Mac OS are some of the most popular OSes.