You can keep both if you use a startup menu to boot directly into DOS or games or whatever and want to access the drive. Windows 95: you will want to disable any 16-bit ASPI drivers in DOS and install the appropriate 32-bit ASPI drivers into Windows 95. To access the ZIP/Jaz/etc drive from DOS or Windows, you have to use guest.exe to assign it a drive letter (which you can put in your autoexec.bat). If you don't have those, you can try various Adaptec drivers, as many cards will work with those. My memory of the intricacies of ASPI had long faded away.ĭOS/Windows 3.x: you will need for ASPI drivers that hopefully came with your SCSI card. In an effort to keep this thread properly necro'ed, I wanted to answer the above as I have just gone through the process of getting an old SCSI ZIP100 working on a W311 machine that I "upgraded" to Windows 95.
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