Hi everybody:
Other suggestions:
https://www.cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk


http://www.partition-saving.com/


    En miércoles, 15 de mayo de 2024, 03:46:41 CEST, Karen Lewellen via 
Freedos-user <freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net> escribió:  
 
 Eric,
While I will work through this list of course, you would need to reach the 
part of that Wikipedia article that talks of Norton 8, I honestly did not 
even start using a computer until 1989, and did not own a copy of Norton 
Utilities until  after 200 at the earliest.
I used it as an example, because the tools were grouped under the same 
organizational umbrella, designed to support it each other in solid 
diagnostic support if that makes sense.
Kind of like spinwrite tools, instead of separate programs that may or may 
not play well together.
will see how well these suggestions work with speech though.
Thanks,
Karen



On Wed, 15 May 2024, Eric Auer via Freedos-user wrote:

>
> Hi Karen,
>
> the utilities recommended by Rober To sound useful:
>
> HDAT2 harddisk repair and diagnostics ATA, ATAPI, SATA, USB, SCSI
>
> ASTRA Advanced Sysinfo Tool and Reporting Assistant
>
> HWiNFO system information, monitoring and diagnostics
>
>>  Do you recall the items in norton utilities?
>
> There is a wikipedia article about them:
>
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norton_Utilities
>
> The first version in 1982 included:
>
> unerase - Freedos comes with a simple undelete tool
> filefix - "repairs damaged files" (?)
> disklook - apparently a floppy disk cluster map display?
>
> secmod - floppy disk sector changer (disk editor, I guess?)
> filehide - Freedos attrib should be sufficient for that
> bathide - related to filehide
>
> timemark - "displays date, time, elapsed time"
> scratr - sets colors, you can use ANSI and PROMPT for that
> reverse - sets colors to black on white
>
> clear - you can use cls for that
> filesort - sorts directories on disk
> diskopt - tunes floppy access speed
>
> beep - just beeps the speaker
> print - prints files
>
> Which free and open tools for directory sorting and
> disk editors do we have in the distro at this time?
>
> I guess diskopt works by creating an interlaced floppy
> sector format, which tools do we have for this style?
>
> According to wikipedia, Norton Utilities 2.0 added filefind
> and renames print to lprint because MS DOS 2.0 already came
> with a tool called print itself.
>
> In version 3.0, you get additional tools for file size and
> directory listings, system information, text search, wiping
> of disks and files etc.
>
> Which tools do we recommend for directory listings, file size
> info and wiping? For size info, I would use the GNU "du" tool,
> which is available as DJGPP compiled DOS binary.
>
> What could we recommend for finding files and text? I guess
> the GNU tools "find" and "grep" would be useful choices here?
> Similar for "wipe".
>
> Version 3.1 adds unerase and unremove directory tools.
>
> New in version 4: Defrag tool (speed disk) and format recover.
> The defrag tool is the same which MS DOS 6 bundled later on.
>
> New in version 4.5: "batch enhander" and a disk editor, the
> ncache disk cache (faster than smartdrive / smartdrv) and diag.
>
> Version 5 improves the disk editor further and bundles 4DOS
> in a variant called NDOS. By now, 4DOS is sort of free/open.
>
> Version 6 adds Win3.1 icons and "diskreet" and improves the
> system info. The unerase tool now supports the same optional
> delete tracking driver as MS / central point undelete does.
>
> Version 7 adds support for compressed disks (doublespace,
> stacker and superstor formats) and norton disk doctor. Would
> be good to know which features the disk doctor had exactly.
>
> The final DOS version 8 just adds some Win3.1 related tools.
> Later versions gradually add Win9x, FAT32, WinNT etc. support
> and features specific to Windows, like a registry editor. Even
> a line of products for Apple Macintosh existed. Competitors to
> Norton Utilities: Central Point PC Tools, various smaller ones.
>
> The author of spinrite claims norton disk doctor is a rip of it:
> https://www.grc.com/sn/sn-666.htm
> Spinrite scans disks for recoverable files and even tries some
> tricks to reconstruct data from almost unreadable sectors, but
> only supports 128 GB style CHS, not LBA.
>
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpinRite claims FreeDOS bundled
> with SpinRite to trigger some 16-4-8-bit CHS overflow > 128 GB?
>
> Well-known free/open alternatives are photorec and testdisk.
>
> The batch enhancer is similar to our v8 power tools, I guess.
> It can beep and show messages in color and with text boxes etc.
>
> Regards, Eric
>
>
>
>
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>


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