Windows 3.11 Workgroups Disk Images

Posted on  by 

  1. Windows 3.11 Workgroups Disk Images For Pc
  2. View Workgroup Computers Windows 10
  3. Windows 3.11 Workgroups Disk Images For Windows 7

Windows for Workgroups 3.11. Windows for Workgroups 3.11 (originally codenamed Snowball) was released on August 11, 1993, and shipped in November 1993. It supported 32-bit file access, full 32-bit network redirectors, and VCACHE.386 file cache, shared between them. WFW 3.11 dropped standard mode support and requires a 386 machine to run. Microsoft Windows 3.1 was an evolution to Windows 3.0 and undoubtably the most popular, poster child version in the Windows 3.x series. Among the changes in Windows 3.1 include a drop of real mode support (see more below), the removal of the Reversi game, updated icons with richer colors, an improved setup process with better hardware detection, and the introduction of batch install. To make windows 3.11 boot from cd I have done this: I have made a floppy disk image (.IMA) using WinImage with DOS 7.1 on it, and put it on my cd. Is it Windows 3.11 pro or 3.11 for workgroups? Can u load NTFS from it? Quote; Share this post. Link to post Share on other sites.

Posted by10 months ago

Windows 3.11 Workgroups Disk Images For Pc

Archived
Windows 3.11 Workgroups Disk Images

View Workgroup Computers Windows 10

Windows 3.11 Workgroups Disk Images

I used fdisk (from a Windows 98 boot disk) to partition a 5-GB hard drive. When it asked if I wanted to enable large file support, I said no, so the default maximum size of the partitions was ~2 GB (2,047 MB). So I created a 2-GB primary DOS partion, then an extended partition, then two logical drives in the extended partition, for a total of three drive letters: C: (~2 GB), D: (~2 GB), and E: (~1 GB). I then formatted all of them (FAT16), and could navigate to all of them from the Windows 98 boot disk command prompt.

Then I installed DOS 6.22 on C:, and after it was installed, I tried navigating to D: and E:, and it couldn't see either one of them. Then I installed WFW 3.11 and it couldn't see them either, though it could see the full ~2 GB of C: drive. I'm wondering if this is a limitation of DOS 6.22 and WFW 3.11, or if I have to use a different method of partitioning the drive.

By the way, I used the Windows 98 boot disk to partition and format the drive because the DOS 6.22 version of fdisk.exe reported the HDD size as ~490 MB. The weird thing is: if I run the DOS 6.22 fdisk on the drive as it is right now, it sees all three partitions and reports their sizes correctly. But if I delete all the partitions and create new ones, it 'thinks' the drive is only ~490 MB.

Disk

Windows 3.11 Workgroups Disk Images For Windows 7

38 comments

Coments are closed