This pre-supposes that Fractint is located on a FAT16 or FAT32 partition. The way I kludged Makefcfg to see the Vesa registers was to boot the PC from a Win95 or a Win98 Boot disk. If you still have one lurking around try booting with a old Plain vanilla Dos 6 or 7 boot disk. Find your Fractint Drive and Subdirectory. Run makefcfg.exe. Most of the time makefcfg.exe will find the Vesa registers in High memory somewhere or wherever CMOS has made a hole for your video stuff. Makefcfg.exe sometimes can't find the vesa registers...I don't know why, but if you run makefcfg 3 or 4 times it will eventually "catch" the Vesa registers at least once. Hopefully if all went according to Hoyle you will have a fractint.cfg file with all the various video modes pointing to appropriate register addresses for your system. Remove the boot disk and Reboot your PC inWin2000. Open up your "Dos Box" in Win2000 and run Fractint to see if it all worked out. Hope this helps. TG ----- Original Message ----- From: "Tim Wegner" <twegner@swbell.net> To: <fractint@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Tuesday, January 29, 2002 7:58 PM Subject: [Fractint] re Fractint on Win2000
I had a few thoughts on this topic.
One is, why not boot to DOS to run Fractint? Can Win2000 make a DOS- bootable floppy?
Another DOS alternative is Caldera OpenDOS. See
http://www.deltasoft.com/opendos.htm
A down side of this is there would have to be a FAT16 partition for OpenDOS to be able to access the hard drive.
Tim
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