On 2015-11-13 12:36, william degnan wrote:
I used to use a program called Laplink, which came with special serial and
parallel option cables to transfer files from one dos  machine to another.
It was useful to "image" DOS computers with it.

Ah, thank you. I have been trying to remember that name since this thread started. I've used extremely little DOS, but I remember seeing LapLink in there. I think it could even bootstrap itself across a serial port to a different machine, as long as DOS was installed. And then it could copy pretty much everything else over.

I don't think these were straight through cables and you needed the laplink
software to be running on both sides.  I see the cables on ebay, I picked
up a set a few years ago to move contents of similar MS DOS system. Serial
is much slower than parallel obviously.

Actually, the cables were straight through. The nice thing was that the serial cable had both the DE9 and DB25 on both sides. And it was combined with a parallel cable as well. So you had two cables and three connectors on each side.

(Well, by straight through I mean that they were null-model cables.)

        Johnny

Reply via email to