![]() However, the two program files that I would have used (according to my research) to use the serial are nowhere to be found on the computer. I didn't test if it was actually a RJ-45 as I didn't have an ethernet cable handy at the time. This is too big for one floppy, and the data is in one single file, which, to my very limited knowledge of actual DOS, would preclude me splitting it with the built-in programs on the computer.Ĭhecking the back of the computer, I noted 1 built-in serial port, a parallel port in an expansion slot, and somewhat inexplicably, a NIC with a jack in it too big to be RJ-11. ![]() The issue comes that the customer "database" (read: space delimited text file) is ~3MB big. I'm very weak with actual MS-DOS, and older hardware in general, but after some fuddling around I finally found the file that the lawyer needed. The core issue is that this work computer is a circa 1988 AOpen.thing, running what looks to be a modified version of DOS 5.0. ![]() ![]() Answers without enough detail may be edited or deleted.Īs part of some sort of legal record-keeping thing, my father's business lawyers has requested a copy of the database of customers from a work computer. Want to improve this post? Provide detailed answers to this question, including citations and an explanation of why your answer is correct. ![]()
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