![]() You plug the HDD into your trusty USB adapter on your modern PC, and hear noises that remind you of a coffee grinder.ĭespite this, the disk eventually spools up and you see 3 partitions, each 2gb in size. You open the chassis and rake out a large pillow's worth of dustballs, yank out cooling fans that seized up ages ago, and finally reach the disk drive. The IVR, dial directory, and all other important path information exists here. Also, their software requires MS-DOS, and will not tolerate the variances of FreeDOS. Hardware cards run on ISA slots, and getting replacements would cost nearly as much as an entire new solution. The system is so old that parts are sparse. ![]() They just need to keep the IVR system from locking up so often. They are adamant that they cannot upgrade the system. You get a customer who has an ancient phone system running on a 300 Mhz dx586 computer. ![]() Even if you did need it, there are better alternatives out now, such as FreeDos. It's 2015 and there is very little place in this world for such a derelict system. It ran well on computers where 100mhz was considered normal. It's stable, simple, and has a small footprint. ![]()
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