On Sat, 10 Nov 2001, Michael Aivaliotis wrote:
> If I understand you correctly, it sounds like you are running the
> installation on one machine to install it on the other. This is the
> wrong approach. The best way to do the installation is to copy ALL the
> install files to the SBC's hard drive and run the install from the
> SBC's hard drive.
Yes, that was indeed the goal but your suggestion makes more sense.
If I understand correctly, you recommend essentially replicating the
CD-ROM's contents/file structure onto the SBC's drive. If so, this should be do-able
and I'll try it.
> If you don't have enough HD space then the next bet would be to map
> the remote CDROM so that the SBC can see it as a mapped drive, then
> run the install on the SBC.
Actually, this was the first thing I tried: Attempting to get the
SBC(W98) machine to see the W2k desktop's CD-ROM. There is some
critical issue with W98 <-> NT/W2k networking that I have not been
able to comprehend/solve. The W2k/NT machines on my network do not
need passwords to see one another's shared filesystems. In order for
my W98 SBC to see the network drives, I have to supply a password upon
booting into W98. So, I can see the other machines on the network this way. But,
when I try to access explicitly shared directories on the NT/W2k
boxes, W98 asks me for some network password that does not exist. If
I bypass the login request, I can't see the networked drives on the SBC.
There is no way that I've been able to find whereby I can get around
this problem.
The reason I attempted to do the remote install W2k -> W98 is that I
can transfer files from W2k desktop to the W98 SBC without any
difficulty. I assumed (incorrectly) that by mapping the SBC disk to
the W2k box that all would go transparently.
This, of course, is way off-topic for an LV group. Scouring the W98
groups and MS websites has not turned up a suitable solution just yet.
> In any case you have to run the installation on the computer that will
> be the final destination.
Thanks for the suggestions and I'll try them out, promptly.
Sincerely,
--- Ravi Narasimhan
---
Ravi Narasimhan
Dept. of Physics and Astronomy, UCLA
http://www.physics.ucla.edu/~oski