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I had one of those back in the day. Blazing fast 2X speed. Worked fine in DOS and later win95, but had some quirks with NT4 -- if you had a CD in the drive, it would hang on boot.
If I do that, I can access the CD-ROM, but only in DOS mode (it truncates long filenames with the ~1, ect). <BR><BR>Anyone have any idea as to how I can get the CD-ROM supported natively in 98SE?
Posted in classic hacks, Retrocomputing Tagged CD-ROM, CM100, CM153, ISA cards, reverse engineering ← Home Brew Sandblaster Is A Junk Bin Delight ...
That extends to understanding some timely dos and don'ts for CD accounts this February. Below, we'll break down half a dozen to consider now.
To that end, below we'll break down some important CD account dos and don'ts that savers should know for 2025. See how much more you could be earning on your money with a top CD here.
Resposta - O drive de CD-ROM, pai de todos os demais CDs do mercado, caracteriza-se por permitir apenas a leitura dos dados gravados no CD, sejam eles arquivos ou músicas. O ROM é abreviatura de ...