• Novell NetWare :)

    From acn@21:3/127.1 to All on Wed Jun 2 14:58:00 2021
    Hi,

    In the mid-90s, I started my "career" in IT by getting to know Novell
    NetWare (4.11) and helping setting up the first computer network in my
    high school (while I was in 10th class).

    I liked the system a lot, at first it used 10 MBit/s coax networking and later was upgraded to RJ45 cables.
    We've set up a pretty nice Novell system with Windows 95 (and later 98 and NT) clients.

    I'm pretty proud that the base installation of the NetWare server started
    in my basement and got transferred to my school :)

    This knowledge helped me pretty much, as I got a job during my last years
    in school and during my studies (computer sciences) - administering the Novell network of a radiologist in my home town with two branches attached via ISDN and later via lease lines (1 MBit/s) :)
    And this helped me getting my first job in 2006, at a Novell partner.

    But I quit this job in 2007, this has been the last time I've used a
    Novell system.

    ...until now! :)

    I've found used NetWare packages at eBay and I've set up an ESXi server on
    an old PC here and installed NetWare 3.12 :)
    As a client, I'm using Win98 in another VM - and it works as fine and easy
    as I remember it :)

    Also, I got my Lexmark X736de laserprinter attached to it! It's very nice that this printer still supports IPX and is able to attach to a NetWare server in RPRINTER mode.
    Printing from Win98 just worked (using a PostScript printer driver) :)

    I'm very happy that this is working and that I even got the patches
    installed :)

    Are any more NetWare users here? :)

    Regards,
    Anna

    --- OpenXP 5.0.50
    * Origin: Imzadi Box Point (21:3/127.1)
  • From 8-Bit@21:2/133 to acn on Wed Jun 2 09:52:35 2021
    Are any more NetWare users here? :)

    Ex-users to be precise but there are still schools that use Netware. I was about to type Novell though they are no longer around and it is owned by somebody else now.

    I am the IT director for an educational coop in the US and we just onboarded two schools that use some form of Netware or tools like Zenworks. One school
    we are migrating over to Windows Server and while the other school we are onboarding, they are using Windows Server already, they use Zenworks.

    At one of the schools, our first task was to clear out the office as it had layers upon layers of paper work, boxes, and old technology. In that mess, I was able to recoup Netware 2.2 manuals only, Netware 3.11, Netware 3.12, Netware 4, Netware 4.11, Netware 5, and OES server software, manuals, and original packaging. Those are all now comfortably at my house (along with
    some other old items) waiting to be played with.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A46 2020/08/26 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: 8-Bit Classics (21:2/133)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to acn on Wed Jun 2 08:41:00 2021
    acn wrote to All <=-

    I've found used NetWare packages at eBay and I've set up an ESXi server
    on an old PC here and installed NetWare 3.12 :)

    Oh, that rocks.

    I started with Netware 2.2 on a Mac network running on Token Ring in 1991; probably the second weirdest install I'd worked on. It was an all IBM, all token ring shop, but the head of HR was a Mac user.

    The first was Portable Netware, a port of the Novell file system and core protocols to UNIX. Netware ran as a UNIX app with a virtual file system sitting on top of UNIX running an Informix database. The database ran a document control system that the Windows clients used.

    When the system crashed you'd need to fsck the bare-metal file system then
    run checks on the virtual system. Slow as molasses, too.

    Novell 3.11 and 3.12 were a beautiful combination of simplicity and
    stability; I had some of those crazy 1-year uptimes you'd read about - but
    on more traditional hardware.




    ... Humanise something free of error
    --- MultiMail/DOS v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From Otto Reverse@21:1/225 to acn on Wed Jun 2 17:41:12 2021
    Are any more NetWare users here? :)

    Not anymore, but in the mid-90's to early 2000s the navy (Canadian) was using Netware on the ships and ashore. It was excellent. Worked well. I remember when they switched to Microsoft for everything and it sucked. Lost features, some of which we still don't have in 2021 (like undeleting a file on a
    network drive).

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A46 2020/08/26 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Free Speech You Smeg Head (21:1/225)
  • From Spectre@21:3/101 to acn on Thu Jun 3 09:58:00 2021
    In the mid-90s, I started my "career" in IT by getting to know Novell NetWare (4.11) and helping setting up the first computer network in my high school (while I was in 10th class).

    I never ended up near netware. But the BBS had NetwareLite peer to peer on ¨10Mb coax when I first got hold of network cards. IPX networking lasted until ¨the BBS closed up. I did have someone try and set me up with 3.5? at some ¨stage, I don't think I had the hardware to pull it off, most the equipment ¨was still 286 clients.

    By the time 95 rolled around everything was pretty much running IP4.

    Spec


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    --- SuperBBS v1.17-3 (Eval)
    * Origin: A camel is a horse designed by a committee. (21:3/101)
  • From acn@21:3/127.1 to 8-Bit on Thu Jun 3 12:57:00 2021
    Am 02.06.21 schrieb 8-Bit@21:2/133 in FSX_RETRO:

    Hallo 8-Bit,

    Are any more NetWare users here? :)

    Ex-users to be precise but there are still schools that use Netware.

    Cool :)

    I was about to type Novell though they are no longer around and it is
    owned by somebody else now.

    Yes, today's company owning the products is MicroFocus.
    Gladly they still host many of the old support documents :)

    I am the IT director for an educational coop in the US and we just onboarded two schools that use some form of Netware or tools like
    Zenworks. One school we are migrating over to Windows Server and while the other school we are onboarding, they are using Windows Server already,
    they use Zenworks.

    I never understood why anyone really wants a Windows Server system, and I pity everyone who has to work on such systems (me included).
    In the past, NetWare always was the better option and today a Linux-based system would be my preferred choice. Especially as almost all malware
    targets Windows+Outlook+Exchange+AD, which seems today's variant of "no
    one ever got fired for buying IBM".

    At one of the schools, our first task was to clear out the office as it
    had layers upon layers of paper work, boxes, and old technology. In that mess, I was able to recoup Netware 2.2 manuals only, Netware 3.11, Netware 3.12, Netware 4, Netware 4.11, Netware 5, and OES server software,
    manuals, and original packaging. Those are all now comfortably at my house (along with some other old items) waiting to be played with.

    Very nice :)
    My eBay finding of NetWare 4.11 and GroupWise will arrive approx. friday
    and the seller told me that he included some other Novell products he is clearing out :)

    Regards,
    Anna

    --- OpenXP 5.0.50
    * Origin: Imzadi Box Point (21:3/127.1)
  • From acn@21:3/127.1 to Otto Reverse on Thu Jun 3 13:43:00 2021
    Am 02.06.21 schrieb Otto Reverse@21:1/225 in FSX_RETRO:

    Hallo Otto,

    Are any more NetWare users here? :)

    Not anymore, but in the mid-90's to early 2000s the navy (Canadian) was using Netware on the ships and ashore. It was excellent. Worked well.

    Oh, interesting.

    I remember when they switched to Microsoft for everything and it
    sucked. Lost features, some of which we still don't have in 2021 (like undeleting a file on a network drive).

    Yes, many NetWare networks switched to M$ software, because some folks pretended that it will be better, faster and cheaper.
    Cheaper it was, but only in quality...
    Now they have to keep up with security fixes, malware and all that stuff.

    It's sad that Novell did many things wrong with their sales partners and
    thus lost many of them to the other side...

    Regards,
    Anna

    --- OpenXP 5.0.50
    * Origin: Imzadi Box Point (21:3/127.1)
  • From acn@21:3/127.1 to poindexter FORTRAN on Thu Jun 3 14:21:00 2021
    Am 02.06.21 schrieb poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 in FSX_RETRO:

    Hallo poindexter,

    I've found used NetWare packages at eBay and I've set up an ESXi server ac>> on an old PC here and installed NetWare 3.12 :)

    Oh, that rocks.

    Thank you.
    It took a while to figure out how to install NetWare, the patches and the drivers -- and in what order.
    But now, it is running :)

    Just for reference:
    I'm using ESXi v7 and the VM for NetWare has 32MB RAM and an 8GB HDD using
    an IDE adapter. The virtual CD-ROM is also attached to the same IDE
    adapter.
    The virtual NIC is the "AMD Lance PCNet 32".

    For the installation, I've used the ISADISK driver for accessing the hard disk in NetWare and no NIC driver.
    After the base installation, I've installed most of the patches and the ODI33G driver set which contained the driver CNEAMD which works fine for
    the PCNet32 NIC.
    The update CDUP5A contains updated drivers for IDE, so I removed "load isadisk" from startup.ncf and added "load nwpa", "load ideata port=1f0
    int=e" and "load idecd".
    This loads the newer IDE driver and also allows mounting the virtual CD-
    ROM. ("load cdrom" in autoexec.ncf enables the CD commands)

    For me, the biggest problem was the "hen and egg" problem to get the
    updates installed without having network access to the SYS: volume.
    So I tried installing all updates that get installed to the DOS volume
    first, then set up the network driver and finally install the rest of the updates to the SYS: partition from a virtual Win98.
    And after doing this, it turned out not to be that difficult :)

    I started with Netware 2.2 on a Mac network running on Token Ring in 1991; probably the second weirdest install I'd worked on. It was an all IBM, all token ring shop, but the head of HR was a Mac user.

    ;-) Nice.
    Did NetWare 2.2 server really run on a Mac or was it just a client?

    I've also used TokenRing for a while as my private LAN system.
    I got some used TR equipment and it worked fine with my Linux systems.
    And being 16 MBit/s, it was faster (and being TR, more reliable) than 10 MBit/s ethernet which was the alternative back then.

    I just had to swap it out for Ethernet when I bought a PowerBook G4 and I
    had to find out that no TR drivers existed for MacOS X :)

    The first was Portable Netware, a port of the Novell file system and core protocols to UNIX. Netware ran as a UNIX app with a virtual file system sitting on top of UNIX running an Informix database. The database ran a document control system that the Windows clients used.

    Cool :)

    When the system crashed you'd need to fsck the bare-metal file system then run checks on the virtual system. Slow as molasses, too.

    Novell 3.11 and 3.12 were a beautiful combination of simplicity and stability; I had some of those crazy 1-year uptimes you'd read about - but on more traditional hardware.

    The NetWare 4.11 system I administered back then also had really good uptimes. The only problems I had in the ~7 years were failing hardware...

    Regards,
    Anna

    --- OpenXP 5.0.50
    * Origin: Imzadi Box Point (21:3/127.1)
  • From goto_KCM@21:1/218 to acn on Thu Jun 3 20:26:10 2021
    Hi!

    Novell NetWare 3.12 was the firs network operating system in saw.
    We used it in my parents company to connect the Windows 3.11 for Workgroups Clients. IPX/SPX was the used protocol.

    I liked the system a lot, at first it used 10 MBit/s coax networking and later was upgraded to RJ45 cables.

    Oh yes, the BNC cable with the terminators on both ends.

    I've found used NetWare packages at eBay and I've set up an ESXi server
    on an old PC here and installed NetWare 3.12 :)
    I used to run it on my old 386 Compaq and run my own NetWare Server.

    Are any more NetWare users here? :)
    Not right now, but in the past, yes.

    Regards
    Andreas

    -=Kautzner-Computer-Museum=-
    zahrl.ddns.net:2023
    https://kcm.or.at

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A46 2020/08/26 (Raspberry Pi/32)
    * Origin: KCM BBS (21:1/218)
  • From 8-Bit@21:2/133 to acn on Thu Jun 3 16:53:01 2021
    I am the IT director for an educational coop in the US and we just onboarded two schools that use some form of Netware or tools like Zenworks. One school we are migrating over to Windows Server and while other school we are onboarding, they are using Windows Server already, they use Zenworks.

    I never understood why anyone really wants a Windows Server system, and
    I pity everyone who has to work on such systems (me included).
    In the past, NetWare always was the better option and today a
    Linux-based system would be my preferred choice. Especially as almost
    all malware targets Windows+Outlook+Exchange+AD, which seems today's variant of "no one ever got fired for buying IBM".

    While I agree that a few years ago, it was pretty great. The integration with Windows is lacking compared to a Windows server. While I don't know
    everything that the new system does, I have learned to appreciate Microsoft
    and their tools. We use Google for our email and most cloud storage and AzureAD/Intune for cloud based Microsoft. Not much local AD except in the schools and that will change in the next few years. Servers, I build many on Ubuntu. It just works.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A46 2020/08/26 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: 8-Bit Classics (21:2/133)
  • From acn@21:3/127.1 to goto_KCM on Fri Jun 4 10:30:00 2021
    Am 03.06.21 schrieb goto_KCM@21:1/218 in FSX_RETRO:

    Hallo goto_Kcm,

    Novell NetWare 3.12 was the firs network operating system in saw.
    We used it in my parents company to connect the Windows 3.11 for
    Workgroups Clients. IPX/SPX was the used protocol.

    Yep, exactly :)
    At my school, we started with Win95 PCs (Pentium-75 pizzaboxes from Siemens-Nixdorf).
    My first task at the job that I had during my last school years was to migrate the DOS/Win3.1 systems there to Win95 (or Win98, I don't remember
    it now) :)

    I liked the system a lot, at first it used 10 MBit/s coax networking and ac>> later was upgraded to RJ45 cables.
    Oh yes, the BNC cable with the terminators on both ends.

    Yep :) It was a really funny time. Just imagine a room full of
    schoolchildren (and a teacher) and someone disconnects the bus at his/her workstation. Yay.
    And another problem we had with the BNC network: The school contracted a local computer shop owner to install the network (cables, connectors,
    NICs). But he obviously either didn't know what he was doing or had bad
    tools - because half of the BNC connectors on the cables he provided just fell off some time after installation. Yay :)

    I've found used NetWare packages at eBay and I've set up an ESXi server ac>> on an old PC here and installed NetWare 3.12 :)
    I used to run it on my old 386 Compaq and run my own NetWare Server.

    *thumbs-up*

    Regards,
    Anna

    --- OpenXP 5.0.50
    * Origin: Imzadi Box Point (21:3/127.1)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to acn on Thu Jun 3 07:02:00 2021
    acn wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-

    I started with Netware 2.2 on a Mac network running on Token Ring probably the second weirdest install I'd worked on. It was an all IBM, all token ring shop, but the head of HR was a Mac user.

    ;-) Nice.
    Did NetWare 2.2 server really run on a Mac or was it just a client?

    Netware ran on a generic 386 PC. Clients were all Mac.

    I've also used TokenRing for a while as my private LAN system.
    I got some used TR equipment and it worked fine with my Linux systems.
    And being 16 MBit/s, it was faster (and being TR, more reliable) than
    10 MBit/s ethernet which was the alternative back then.

    Yep, token passing topologies were the thing back then, when Ethernet was
    all shared space. Before ethernet switches, collisions were a serious issue and the network could seriously degrade.

    My first switched network used a 6 port 10 megabit ethernet switch as a core switch, and 24 port hubs as user switches. That was fancy stuff back then.

    I did a lot of stuff with ARCnet back then - seriously lenient. We'd run it
    on different grades of coax, accidentally plug hubs into hubs, and it still worked. Passing a token meant that it'd degrade gracefully. Having to set a network ID via jumper was a pain, though.

    Someone once joked that you could tell who was a network person by asking
    them how many syllables were in the word "coax".


    Novell 3.11 and 3.12 were a beautiful combination of simplicity and stability; I had some of those crazy 1-year uptimes you'd read about - but on more traditional hardware.

    The NetWare 4.11 system I administered back then also had really good uptimes. The only problems I had in the ~7 years were failing
    hardware...

    I started to lose momentum with 4.x when they added directory services. I
    had bounced back and forth between managing networks and managing phone systems and when I went back, Windows NT had started taking over.

    I was a member of a Novell user group in the SF Bay area from 1991-1996, and we'd met once at their office in San Jose. I remember being in my 20s and amazed at an office campus with day care, a spa, hair salon, day care, a
    food court with high chairs so you could have lunch with your kid, a pond, walking paths...

    Fast forward many years later and I wondered why my current office space looked familiar. My current employer had bought the Novell campus and I was working in the same place.



    ... Overtly resist change
    --- MultiMail/DOS v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to Spectre on Thu Jun 3 07:29:00 2021
    Spectre wrote to acn <=-

    I never ended up near netware. But the BBS had NetwareLite peer to peer
    on ¨10Mb coax when I first got hold of network cards. IPX networking lasted until ¨the BBS closed up.

    I remember wanting to play with Netware Lite and Novell DOS, but I had a
    DOS BBS, an OS/2 desktop, and LANTastic working at the time.

    By the time 95 rolled around everything was pretty much running IP4.

    I worked at a company that specialized in making screen savers with flying toasters on them at the time. They were about 80/20 Mac and DOS/Windows, and we used Netware 3.12 servers with Services for Mac, and later added IP to
    the mix.

    Trying to keep 3 different ethernet types, an IPX netware network, Appletalk running on ethernet_snap, and integrating ethernet_II frames and adding IP
    to the mix was a pain in the ass... I'm surprised it all worked.

    At least it was all UTP by then and not coax.

    It all worked until the Chicago builds (Windows95 beta) came out, and they
    had optional netware file sharing protocols. If you didn't know the 8
    digit hexadecimal number (mine was DEADBEEF) and left it at the default of
    all 1s, the existing network would die.

    The engineer who turned out to be the culprit blamed Microsoft for not being more careful. I had to remind him he was on a production network and it was
    a beta.

    In retrospect, I'm sure some developer must have gotten a secret award for coming up with another way to screw Novell.

    Luckily that feature didn't make it into the release version.




    ... Overtly resist change
    --- MultiMail/DOS v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to acn on Thu Jun 3 07:37:00 2021
    acn wrote to 8-Bit <=-

    I never understood why anyone really wants a Windows Server system, and
    I pity everyone who has to work on such systems (me included).
    In the past, NetWare always was the better option and today a
    Linux-based system would be my preferred choice.

    Novell's high cost got Microsoft's foot in the door, and just good enough
    (but significantly cheaper) gave them an opening. Novell didn't support IP well, and UNIX was expensive and needed separate admin staff at the time.

    So, given your choice of Netware for file and print services, and a UNIX environment for IP management, or a couple of NT boxes with GUIs to do it
    all, lots of companies took the Microsoft path.

    Sure, they were 23/6 systems and needed the occasional reboot, but the
    people who needed the extra uptime could use Netware.

    Active Directory versus Novell DS was the final killer. With Microsoft
    owning most of the client OSes that was a done deal.

    all malware targets Windows+Outlook+Exchange+AD, which seems today's variant of "no one ever got fired for buying IBM".

    I made a good living setting up Linux environments with mail, groupware and file/web services for startups back in the early 2000s for people who
    couldn't afford "WOEA", but now I think G suite does a better job than bringing it in-house.

    My eBay finding of NetWare 4.11 and GroupWise will arrive approx.
    friday and the seller told me that he included some other Novell
    products he is clearing out :)

    Please don't make me run a Novell network at my house. Please don't make me want to run a Novell network at my house...


    ... Overtly resist change
    --- MultiMail/DOS v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From N1uro@21:4/107 to acn on Fri Jun 4 14:43:00 2021
    Greetings;

    acn wrote to goto_KCM <=-

    Novell NetWare 3.12 was the firs network operating system in saw.
    We used it in my parents company to connect the Windows 3.11 for Workgroups Clients. IPX/SPX was the used protocol.

    When I went for my MOAB/Netware 4.x cert, when things were all said and done
    I asked the instructors if they were aware Novell 2 could run tcp/ip. They insisted it could not. I asked for admin access to one of their 2.x training servers and to be given an unused IP... and 5 minutes.

    When I was done I told them to ping the server as proof... they were floored that it worked, and they then logged into it as further proof. The protocol stack is not included with 2.x however 3.x is compiled under the same flavor
    of C as 2.x so all one needs to do is copy over the NLMs from 3 to 2, configure them and off you go! Had the NLMs not been compiled with the same C setup, it may not have worked. I did test it in my lab ahead of time so I was confident it would :)

    ... Old musicians never die, they just get played out.
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52
    * Origin: Carnage! Hartford, Ct (21:4/107)
  • From Arelor@21:2/138 to poindexter FORTRAN on Fri Jun 4 17:53:50 2021
    Re: Re: Novell NetWare :)
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to acn on Thu Jun 03 2021 07:37 am

    couldn't afford "WOEA", but now I think G suite does a better job than bringing it in-house.

    Small mention here: that only works if you or your company can afford the paperwork to let Alphabet
    deal with the data.

    I work with data that would need the signed aproval of the President of the Spanish Data Protection
    Agency to be sent abroad.

    To my knowledge, a lot of Google data is backed up to foreigner servers which can be a legal
    liability. This is the reason why my old college ran their own groupware suites instead of
    externalizing them to Google.

    --
    gopher://gopher.richardfalken.com/1/richardfalken
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Linux
    * Origin: Palantir * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL * (21:2/138)
  • From deon@21:2/116 to acn on Sat Jun 5 09:59:55 2021
    Re: Novell NetWare :)
    By: acn to All on Wed Jun 02 2021 02:58 pm

    Are any more NetWare users here? :)

    Ha!

    Yes, I have netware 6.5 running here, although I think I might change down to 3.12 (which is what I used in my first job all those years ago). Seems 6.5 is quite bloated and wants a GUI interface. Probably doesnt help that all that knowledge of how to maintain it has been forgotton for too long :)

    I was running my original DOS BBS on it (Ezycom with Portal of Power), but was having strange "file not found" issues with it (when the files/dirs were clearly there). It was probably a memory issue since the netware drivers seem to take up quite a bit of convential memory.

    I found all the netware versions on a website somewhere (that has old OSes of many flavours) - including license keys. (I think https://winworldpc.com/home)

    ...ėīåļ

    ... Those who think they know it all, often upset those of us who do.
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Linux
    * Origin: I'm playing with ANSI+videotex - wanna play too? (21:2/116)
  • From Spectre@21:3/101 to poindexter FORTRAN on Sat Jun 5 12:36:00 2021
    Trying to keep 3 different ethernet types, an IPX netware network, Appletalk running on ethernet_snap, and integrating ethernet_II
    frames and adding IP

    I got as far as trying to run NWLITE over IP :) It was pretty nasty though, ¨most of the high level drivers with a shim for loading over a crynwyr driver. ¨The best I could manage was clients able to see each other, but not actually ¨talk to each other. Kind of frustrating.

    Also used Artisoft's The Network Eye back then too... great for working on ¨headless clients. Just bang in the netbios name and have the remote screen ¨display right in front of you. Had a raft of weird clients, all 286s, some ¨with just a floppy drive, others with shared and subst drives all over the ¨place. Looking back it was eye wateringly complicated if you were looking at ¨it from outside.

    I also couldn't get NWLITE to play nice with things like desqview either. It ¨tended to eat to much low memory and lose connectivity between different ¨tasks.

    Spec


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    --- SuperBBS v1.17-3 (Eval)
    * Origin: A camel is a horse designed by a committee. (21:3/101)
  • From dflorey@21:1/226 to poindexter FORTRAN on Sat Jun 5 14:58:44 2021
    Someone once joked that you could tell who was a network person by
    asking them how many syllables were in the word "coax".

    Hahahaha so true!

    Dave!


    dflorey
    Retro16 BBS --> bbs.retro16.com (WIP)

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A46 2020/08/26 (Windows/32)
    * Origin: Retro16 BBS (21:1/226)
  • From N1uro@21:4/107 to deon on Sat Jun 5 08:16:00 2021
    Hey deon;

    deon wrote to acn <=-

    https://winworldpc.com/home)

    Great link, thanks for sharing!

    ... Urologist's license plate: PPDR
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52
    * Origin: Carnage! Hartford, Ct (21:4/107)
  • From N1uro@21:4/107 to Spectre on Sat Jun 5 08:28:00 2021
    Hey Spectre;

    Spectre wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-

    [snip]

    I also couldn't get NWLITE to play nice with things like desqview
    either. It tended to eat to much low memory and lose connectivity
    between different tasks.

    Years ago my first bbs was Renegade with 1 line and d'bridge for echomail.
    I eventually upgraded to 2 lines... mainly out of curiousity to see what its chatroom features were like and such. The "big board" at the time was a TBBS system with 12 lines, and he also had a MajorBBS with about 6 lines on it.
    I loved TBBS but there were some great features coming out for MajorBBS including MajorFIDO which I became a team member of.

    MBBS had support for IPX/SPX but at the time I only had a NWLITE server and client setup. They claimed that the protocol in NWLITE wasn't 100% compatible with IPX/SPX and the link would not work. Since MBBS ran on a stand-alone pc this was an issue to speak with it however after some config hacking I did
    get it to work quite nicely. Eventually I got full Netware 3.x and installed that. Ran that for years, even linked to my primary linux server quite nicely. It made for a great file storage system. I wasn't too keen for the GUI they incorporated in 4. I haven't run it since. They claimed that you could never install a foreign key in it but that was false... or at least I figured out that undocumented feature <G>

    ... Old accountants never die, they just lose their balance.
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52
    * Origin: Carnage! Hartford, Ct (21:4/107)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to Spectre on Sat Jun 5 10:57:00 2021
    Spectre wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-

    Also used Artisoft's The Network Eye back then too... great for working
    on ¨headless clients.

    Way back when, I worked for a company that threw out a lot of stuff. I got a box of 2400 baud modems that jump-started the BBS, and we'd give the others away with people we wanted to call BBSes.

    When I installed their Netware network, they tossed out a LANtastic network, which went home with me. I shared the screen with the BBS using their apps, don't know if that was branded Network Eye or something else - but it
    worked.

    Later, I moved my desktop to OS/2 and was able to create a DOS VDM that ran the LANTastic drivers, so I could still talk to the DOS BBS box.




    ... Apotheosis was the beginning before the beginning.
    --- MultiMail/DOS v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From paulie420@21:2/150 to poindexter FORTRAN on Sat Jun 5 16:40:41 2021
    Way back when, I worked for a company that threw out a lot of stuff. I
    got a box of 2400 baud modems that jump-started the BBS, and we'd give
    the others away with people we wanted to call BBSes.

    Oh man, thats awesome - I would have killed for access to multiple 2400s in 91. :P

    I used to call America Online and order 40 starter kits for my Computer User Group; one of the ladies in the group would take them and de-sticker them... return the next week and - we always had free 3.5"s.

    But a modem-pool? OMG... I'd of been a happy camper!



    |07p|15AULIE|1142|07o
    |08.........

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/05/03 (Raspberry Pi/32)
    * Origin: 2o fOr beeRS bbS>>20ForBeers.com:1337 (21:2/150)
  • From Spectre@21:3/101 to N1uro on Sun Jun 6 10:48:00 2021
    its chatroom features were like and such. The "big board" at the time
    was a TBBS system with 12 lines, and he also had a MajorBBS with
    about 6 lines on it. I loved TBBS but there were some great features coming out for MajorBBS including MajorFIDO which I became a team

    There were two large multiline boards in Melbourne, one TBBS the other MBBS. ¨The MBBS guy just did stuff his way, aside from adding dialin PPP at some ¨point I don't think it ever changed.

    Somehow, the TBBS guy was able to use FrontDoor to transfer mail, although I ¨have no real idea what kind of message base TBBS sports or how it was tossed ¨there after. We had a "local" net running at one point.

    Spec


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    --- SuperBBS v1.17-3 (Eval)
    * Origin: A camel is a horse designed by a committee. (21:3/101)
  • From Spectre@21:3/101 to poindexter FORTRAN on Sun Jun 6 10:53:00 2021
    Way back when, I worked for a company that threw out a lot of stuff. I got

    I got lucky twice... my original network gear came from another BBSer that ¨collected it from an obsoleted government dept network. Can't imagine trying ¨to run large number of systems on thin but there you go. The other was a ¨couple of years later, an IT company moved into a space a few down from where ¨I was working and during the move they started throwing out dumpster loads of ¨goodies. Came home with lots of goodies from there that year. Then each end ¨of financial year they'd throw out a bit more. Was good while it lasted.

    Spec


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    --- SuperBBS v1.17-3 (Eval)
    * Origin: A camel is a horse designed by a committee. (21:3/101)
  • From N1uro@21:4/107 to Spectre on Sun Jun 6 09:17:00 2021
    Hello Spectre;

    Spectre wrote to N1uro <=-

    There were two large multiline boards in Melbourne, one TBBS the other MBBS. The MBBS guy just did stuff his way, aside from adding dialin PPP
    at some point I don't think it ever changed.

    Melbourne?... Australia or Florida?

    Somehow, the TBBS guy was able to use FrontDoor to transfer mail,
    although I have no real idea what kind of message base TBBS sports or
    how it was tossed there after. We had a "local" net running at one
    point.

    I actually had TBBS running on Netware. It was pretty neat - and all done in DBase. I only had an eval copy so much of it was crippled. Major became Worldgroup.... I ran it for a year then dropped it. Even though that
    was done in C, it didn't run too well on Netware. I did have D'bridge
    tossing the echo areas until MajorFIDO came out in Alpha and I was asked
    to be on their dev team. Had lots of fun headbanging on ideas.


    ... Press any key to--NO, NOT THAT ONE!
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52
    * Origin: Carnage! Hartford, Ct (21:4/107)
  • From Spectre@21:3/101 to N1uro on Mon Jun 7 09:14:00 2021
    Melbourne?... Australia or Florida?

    Ostraya mate, we don't give a continental about Florida :) Did know there ¨was one in Florida, but seeing as the US has almost one of everything from ¨everywhere else in the world, its not to surprising.

    Spec


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    --- SuperBBS v1.17-3 (Eval)
    * Origin: A camel is a horse designed by a committee. (21:3/101)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to Spectre on Sun Jun 6 10:18:00 2021
    Spectre wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-

    goodies from there that year. Then each end ¨of financial year they'd throw out a bit more. Was good while it lasted.

    Good times. Back then, I think each generation was so much more powerful
    that a lot more usable stuff was tossed by companies.

    Going from a 286 to a 386, or 386 to 486? Amazing.

    Going from a Core 2 duo to an i5? Not so much.

    If it weren't for the speed boost with SSDs, a lot of companies would keep their hardware around for much longer and not upgrade to newer systems. The industry had better come up with another speed bump in a couple of years' time, or going from an i9 to i11 will be a tough choice for companies when enough is good enough.


    ... Where is the center of the maze?
    --- MultiMail/DOS v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From acn@21:3/127.1 to poindexter FORTRAN on Tue Jun 8 17:56:00 2021
    Am 03.06.21 schrieb poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 in FSX_RETRO:

    Hallo poindexter,

    I started with Netware 2.2 on a Mac network running on Token Ring
    [...]
    Did NetWare 2.2 server really run on a Mac or was it just a client?

    Netware ran on a generic 386 PC. Clients were all Mac.

    Ah okay, that I got it wrong :)

    Yep, token passing topologies were the thing back then, when Ethernet was all shared space. Before ethernet switches, collisions were a serious
    issue and the network could seriously degrade.

    Yep. And so Token-Ring had a real advantage :)

    My first switched network used a 6 port 10 megabit ethernet switch as a core switch, and 24 port hubs as user switches. That was fancy stuff back then.

    Oh, I don't remember what my first Ethernet setups looked like.
    But at least at home, it wasn't fancy stuff :)

    I did a lot of stuff with ARCnet back then - seriously lenient. We'd run
    it on different grades of coax, accidentally plug hubs into hubs, and it still worked. Passing a token meant that it'd degrade gracefully. Having
    to set a network ID via jumper was a pain, though.

    ;-)

    Someone once joked that you could tell who was a network person by asking them how many syllables were in the word "coax".

    Could you explain this one to me? Sorry :)
    (I guess I don't have enough experience with coax networks, as I've only
    used the 10base2 'cheapernet')

    I was a member of a Novell user group in the SF Bay area from 1991-1996, and we'd met once at their office in San Jose. I remember being in my 20s and amazed at an office campus with day care, a spa, hair salon, day care, a food court with high chairs so you could have lunch with your kid, a pond, walking paths...

    Fast forward many years later and I wondered why my current office space looked familiar. My current employer had bought the Novell campus and I
    was working in the same place.

    Nice coincidence :)

    Regards,
    Anna

    --- OpenXP 5.0.50
    * Origin: Imzadi Box Point (21:3/127.1)
  • From acn@21:3/127.1 to poindexter FORTRAN on Tue Jun 8 18:05:00 2021
    Am 03.06.21 schrieb poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 in FSX_RETRO:

    Hallo poindexter,

    I never understood why anyone really wants a Windows Server system, and ac>> I pity everyone who has to work on such systems (me included).
    In the past, NetWare always was the better option and today a
    Linux-based system would be my preferred choice.

    Novell's high cost got Microsoft's foot in the door, and just good enough (but significantly cheaper) gave them an opening.

    That's right.

    So, given your choice of Netware for file and print services, and a UNIX environment for IP management, or a couple of NT boxes with GUIs to do it all, lots of companies took the Microsoft path.

    Sadly, that's true.
    And when Novell integrated TCP/IP in a better way (NetWare 5), it was too late...

    Active Directory versus Novell DS was the final killer. With Microsoft owning most of the client OSes that was a done deal.

    Although I don't understand it. If one had used NetWare, GroupWise and ZenWorks, the network management was quite similar to a ActiveDirectory
    and GroupPolicy system, even with more features - as far as I remember.

    I made a good living setting up Linux environments with mail, groupware
    and file/web services for startups back in the early 2000s for people who couldn't afford "WOEA", but now I think G suite does a better job than bringing it in-house.

    Maybe, but you give away the control over your data (and the data itself).
    You are even more dependant on the system, that it is available and that
    no AI system thinks you did something wrong and closes the account.

    My eBay finding of NetWare 4.11 and GroupWise will arrive approx.
    friday and the seller told me that he included some other Novell
    products he is clearing out :)

    Please don't make me run a Novell network at my house. Please don't make
    me want to run a Novell network at my house...

    ;-) My package arrived and it looks nice :)
    At the moment, I have my NetWare 3.12 VM running and I'm collecting all
    the patches for the 3.x and 4.x versions and will put them in my BBS's
    file base.

    Regards,
    Anna

    --- OpenXP 5.0.50
    * Origin: Imzadi Box Point (21:3/127.1)
  • From Spectre@21:3/101 to poindexter FORTRAN on Wed Jun 9 14:59:00 2021
    Going from a 286 to a 386, or 386 to 486? Amazing.

    Not sure what the year was now... but early-ish 486 territory, and they ¨through out a few 386DX models.. a lot of it was ooooold stuff though too... ¨I forget the model number, but there was a 1U rack that stood about 5-6' ¨tall, 5170 or something maybe, a couple of XT boxes with a coax based card ¨for terminal use... Definitely a RT/6000 though as well, never did get that ¨to run though :/

    Spec


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    --- SuperBBS v1.17-3 (Eval)
    * Origin: A camel is a horse designed by a committee. (21:3/101)
  • From Spectre@21:3/101 to acn on Wed Jun 9 15:04:00 2021
    Yep. And so Token-Ring had a real advantage :)

    I believe it was a bit horses for courses... an over large ethernet could ¨have bad collision problems, and multiple collision problems as the fallback ¨was stop for a predetermined time and try again, so two of more nodes with ¨collisions could keep colliding. But in a low utilisation/node density you ¨could get better throughput than with token-ring. But a load that could ¨bring ethernet to its knees would still be chugging along with token ring. A ¨little like comparing a diseasal to petrol/gas or a racehorse to a war-horse ¨to completely different schools of thought.

    Spec


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    --- SuperBBS v1.17-3 (Eval)
    * Origin: A camel is a horse designed by a committee. (21:3/101)
  • From acn@21:3/127.1 to Spectre on Wed Jun 9 10:50:00 2021
    Am 09.06.21 schrieb Spectre@21:3/101 in FSX_RETRO:

    Hallo Spectre,

    Yep. And so Token-Ring had a real advantage :)

    I believe it was a bit horses for courses... an over large ethernet could have bad collision problems, and multiple collision problems as the
    fallback was stop for a predetermined time and try again, so two of more nodes with collisions could keep colliding. But in a low utilisation/node density you could get better throughput than with token-ring. But a load that could bring ethernet to its knees would still be chugging along with token ring. A little like comparing a diseasal to petrol/gas or a
    racehorse to a war-horse to completely different schools of thought.

    Hmm, as Token-Ring had 16 MBit/s and Ethernet had 10 MBit/s, at least the nominal speed was higher.
    And I remember that copying files between my Linux machines really was
    fast and made use of that speed in my TR network.
    So it really outperformed a 10 MBit/s Ethernet network...

    Regards,
    Anna

    --- OpenXP 5.0.50
    * Origin: Imzadi Box Point (21:3/127.1)
  • From Spectre@21:3/101 to acn on Thu Jun 10 00:49:00 2021
    Hmm, as Token-Ring had 16 MBit/s and Ethernet had 10 MBit/s, at least the

    Interesting, I never actually used TR only ThinNet back then, although I did ¨have a couple of people try and talk me into it for perceived advantage. I ¨am/was certain TR had a lower signalling rate though.. Was there more than ¨one version maybe? Ahh there was 4 and 16Mbps versions... I do believe I was ¨being offered 4Mbps as being more effective at full load than 10Mbps Ethernet

    I don't ever recall anything much causing network saturation though either. ¨The only time I ever ran into issues was bulk copying via samba you could ¨lock all the other nodes until copying finished.

    Spec


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    --- SuperBBS v1.17-3 (Eval)
    * Origin: A camel is a horse designed by a committee. (21:3/101)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to acn on Wed Jun 9 07:32:00 2021
    acn wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-

    Someone once joked that you could tell who was a network person by asking them how many syllables were in the word "coax".

    Could you explain this one to me? Sorry :)

    "normal" people pronounce it with one syllable, network people with two syllables.


    ... Am I any closer to finding what I'm looking for?
    --- MultiMail/DOS v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to Spectre on Wed Jun 9 11:08:39 2021
    Re: Re: Novell NetWare :)
    By: Spectre to acn on Thu Jun 10 2021 12:49 am

    I don't ever recall anything much causing network saturation though either. The only time I ever ran into issues was bulk copying via samba you could lock all the other nodes until copying finished.

    I had a couple of systems in colo facilities where they'd provide a 10 mbps connection that would start falling over around 6 mbps.
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From acn@21:3/127.1 to poindexter FORTRAN on Thu Jun 10 10:02:00 2021
    Am 09.06.21 schrieb poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 in FSX_RETRO:

    Hallo poindexter,

    Someone once joked that you could tell who was a network person by asking pF>> them how many syllables were in the word "coax".

    Could you explain this one to me? Sorry :)

    "normal" people pronounce it with one syllable, network people with two syllables.

    Oh okay :) Yes, I'm also pronouncing it "co-axial" :)
    Thanks!

    Regards,
    Anna

    --- OpenXP 5.0.50
    * Origin: Imzadi Box Point (21:3/127.1)
  • From acn@21:3/127.1 to Spectre on Thu Jun 10 11:26:00 2021
    Am 10.06.21 schrieb Spectre@21:3/101 in FSX_RETRO:

    Hallo Spectre,

    I am/was certain TR had a lower signalling rate though.. Was there more
    than one version maybe? Ahh there was 4 and 16Mbps versions...

    Yes, there were 4 and 16 MBit/s versions, and even a 100 MBit/s version later.

    I don't ever recall anything much causing network saturation though
    either. The only time I ever ran into issues was bulk copying via samba
    you could lock all the other nodes until copying finished.

    Well, that is a network saturation then :)
    And *that* wouldn't happen in a TR network.

    Regards,
    Anna

    --- OpenXP 5.0.50
    * Origin: Imzadi Box Point (21:3/127.1)
  • From Spectre@21:3/101 to acn on Fri Jun 11 12:30:00 2021
    Sometimes you need to coax the coax into working :)

    Spec


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    --- SuperBBS v1.17-3 (Eval)
    * Origin: A camel is a horse designed by a committee. (21:3/101)
  • From Spectre@21:3/101 to acn on Fri Jun 11 12:35:00 2021
    either. The only time I ever ran into issues was bulk copying via samba you could lock all the other nodes until copying finished.

    Well, that is a network saturation then :) And *that* wouldn't
    happen in a TR network.

    I'm not so sure it was "network" saturation as "server" saturation. At the ¨time we used to retire the oldest PC to the server role. I think at this ¨stage the server was struggling to process packets, but it was also working ¨as a router for both dialup and eventually ADSL. The file copying issue was ¨the only one that ever killed everything. Eventually it "the server" started ¨throwing errors and locking the card up with overflow back to back writes to ¨the card, whatever it was... but either way I think you're right even if the ¨card/server wasn't keeping up TR would still release it.

    Spec


    *** THE READER V4.50 [freeware]
    --- SuperBBS v1.17-3 (Eval)
    * Origin: A camel is a horse designed by a committee. (21:3/101)
  • From Vk3jed@21:1/109 to Spectre on Fri Jun 11 18:42:00 2021
    On 06-11-21 12:30, Spectre wrote to acn <=-

    Sometimes you need to coax the coax into working :)

    :D


    ... Guests being stalked by zombies stay at Best Western.
    === MultiMail/Win v0.52
    --- SBBSecho 3.10-Linux
    * Origin: Freeway BBS Bendigo,Australia freeway.apana.org.au (21:1/109)
  • From bbsing@21:1/172 to all on Thu Apr 6 01:08:02 2023
    I have Cheyene Fax Server software, and I'm going to get rid of it.
    Time for me to purge some stuff, and its on the list of things to go.

    I'm wondering if there is anyone here with interest, in the software.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A45 2020/02/18 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: The Bottomless Abyss BBS * bbs.bottomlessabyss.net (21:1/172)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to bbsing on Sat Apr 8 08:36:00 2023
    bbsing wrote to all <=-

    I have Cheyene Fax Server software, and I'm going to get rid of it.
    Time for me to purge some stuff, and its on the list of things to go.

    I'm wondering if there is anyone here with interest, in the software.

    Cheyenne? That brings back memories. I ran it and ArcServe back in my
    3.11 days. What are you running it on?




    ... The answers will be found in the logs.
    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From bbsing@21:1/172 to poindexter FORTRAN on Sun Apr 9 02:02:49 2023
    On 08 Apr 2023, poindexter FORTRAN said the following...

    bbsing wrote to all <=-

    I have Cheyene Fax Server software, and I'm going to get rid of it. Time for me to purge some stuff, and its on the list of things to go.

    I'm wondering if there is anyone here with interest, in the software.

    Cheyenne? That brings back memories. I ran it and ArcServe back in my
    3.11 days. What are you running it on?

    I'm not running it on anything right now. Its been in a box for years, I've saved it. Now I'm looking to send it to the BBSes/net via zip archives, or image files, and get rid of the actual physical box and discs.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A45 2020/02/18 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: The Bottomless Abyss BBS * bbs.bottomlessabyss.net (21:1/172)
  • From Commodore Clifford@21:3/171 to bbsing on Mon Apr 17 14:39:02 2023
    On 06 Apr 23 01:08:02 bbsing wrote...

    I have Cheyene Fax Server software, and I'm going to get rid of it.
    Time for me to purge some stuff, and its on the list of things to go.

    I'm wondering if there is anyone here with interest, in the software.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A45 2020/02/18 (Linux/64) * Origin: The
    Bottomless Abyss BBS * bbs.bottomlessabyss.net (21:1/172)

    To which Commodore Clifford replies...

    What are you asking?

    Been awhile since I played with Novell. Wonder if I can even get the
    software anymore (I'm sure mine is long gone).

    --- RATSoft/FIDO v09.14.95 [JetMail 1.01]
    * Origin: STar Fleet HQ - Real Atari! bbs.sfhqbbs.org:5983 (21:3/171.0)
  • From Bf2K+@21:3/171 to Commodore Clifford on Mon Apr 17 22:04:54 2023
    I probably have Netware around here somewhere...

    --- RATSoft/FIDO v09.14.95 [JetMail 1.01]
    * Origin: STar Fleet HQ - Real Atari! bbs.sfhqbbs.org:5983 (21:3/171.0)
  • From Commodore Clifford@21:3/171 to Bf2K+ on Wed Apr 19 00:42:32 2023
    On 17 Apr 23 22:04:54 Bf2K+ wrote...

    I probably have Netware around here somewhere...

    --- RATSoft/FIDO v09.14.95 [JetMail 1.01] * Origin: STar Fleet HQ -
    Real Atari! bbs.sfhqbbs.org:5983 (21:3/171.0)

    To which Commodore Clifford replies...

    Then again, I remind myself my project to-do list already exceeds my
    free-time capactiy. :)

    But I had been in a certification class for CNA/CNE back in the 90's and
    that included a low user version of 3.11 that I actually ended up using
    when I started my business. :)

    Good times. But yeah, I wouldn't mind setting one up again someday just
    for kicks.

    --- RATSoft/FIDO v09.14.95 [JetMail 1.01]
    * Origin: STar Fleet HQ - Real Atari! bbs.sfhqbbs.org:5983 (21:3/171.0)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to Commodore Clifford on Wed Apr 19 08:22:00 2023
    Commodore Clifford wrote to Bf2K+ <=-

    But I had been in a certification class for CNA/CNE back in the 90's
    and that included a low user version of 3.11 that I actually ended up using when I started my business. :)

    I was a Netware admin back in the '90s, too. The Silicon Valley Novell
    User Group would meet at the Novell campus in San Jose, and I was
    impressed at what my seat licenses bought them -- reflection pools,
    massive food court, free snacks, expensive cubicles, on-site daycare,
    dry-cleaning, a mini market...

    Many years later, I worked for a large internet auction site and
    couldn't figure out why the campus looked so familiar - it was the old
    Novell Campus!



    ... Do the last thing first
    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From bbsing@21:1/172 to Commodore Clifford on Wed Apr 19 23:24:02 2023
    On 17 Apr 2023, Commodore Clifford said the following...
    I have Cheyene Fax Server software, and I'm going to get rid of it.

    I'm wondering if there is anyone here with interest, in the software.

    What are you asking?


    I'm asking if anyone wants the software.


    On a side note I had the discs for netware 4.x and 3.14 and I think I gave those away in December 2022 to re-pc. I got depressed and just started
    purging stuff, and didn't realize I wanted to upload that software to BBS systems.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A45 2020/02/18 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: The Bottomless Abyss BBS * bbs.bottomlessabyss.net (21:1/172)
  • From deon@21:2/116 to bbsing on Thu Apr 20 20:22:50 2023
    Re: Re: Novell NetWare fax server
    By: bbsing to Commodore Clifford on Wed Apr 19 2023 11:24 pm

    On a side note I had the discs for netware 4.x and 3.14 and I think I gave those away in December 2022 to re-pc. I got depressed and just started purging stuff, and didn't realize I wanted to upload that software to BBS systems.

    Did you, by any chance, keep the 4.x license disk? It seems the license key for 4.x is hard to find...


    ...ėīåļ
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Linux
    * Origin: I'm playing with ANSI+videotex - wanna play too? (21:2/116)
  • From Commodore Clifford@21:3/171 to poindexter FORTRAN on Thu Apr 20 21:25:50 2023
    On 19 Apr 23 08:22:00 poindexter FORTRAN wrote...

    Commodore Clifford wrote to Bf2K+ <=-

    But I had been in a certification class for CNA/CNE back in the
    90's and that included a low user version of 3.11 that I
    actually ended up using when I started my business. :)

    I was a Netware admin back in the '90s, too. The Silicon Valley
    Novell User Group would meet at the Novell campus in San Jose, and I
    was impressed at what my seat licenses bought them -- reflection
    pools, massive food court, free snacks, expensive cubicles, on-site daycare, dry-cleaning, a mini market...

    Many years later, I worked for a large internet auction site and
    couldn't figure out why the campus looked so familiar - it was the
    old Novell Campus!



    ... Do the last thing first --- MultiMail/Win v0.52 * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)

    To which Commodore Clifford replies...

    Now that made my day!

    --- RATSoft/FIDO v09.14.95 [JetMail 1.01]
    * Origin: STar Fleet HQ - Real Atari! bbs.sfhqbbs.org:5983 (21:3/171.0)
  • From Commodore Clifford@21:3/171 to bbsing on Thu Apr 20 21:27:38 2023
    On 19 Apr 23 23:24:02 bbsing wrote...

    On 17 Apr 2023, Commodore Clifford said the following...
    I have Cheyene Fax Server software, and I'm going to get rid
    of it.

    I'm wondering if there is anyone here with interest, in the software.

    What are you asking?


    I'm asking if anyone wants the software.

    On a side note I had the discs for netware 4.x and 3.14 and I think
    I gave those away in December 2022 to re-pc. I got depressed and just started purging stuff, and didn't realize I wanted to upload that
    software to BBS systems.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A45 2020/02/18 (Linux/64) * Origin: The
    Bottomless Abyss BBS * bbs.bottomlessabyss.net (21:1/172)

    To which Commodore Clifford replies...

    Well, what I meant was if you wanted anything for it... Yeah, I'd like a copy... whether it's the originals or not is less meaningful if someone
    wants the actual original box/manuals/etc... Not that I wouldn't like
    them, but I focus my "original with box etc." to mostly Atari stuff or
    iconic games.

    --- RATSoft/FIDO v09.14.95 [JetMail 1.01]
    * Origin: STar Fleet HQ - Real Atari! bbs.sfhqbbs.org:5983 (21:3/171.0)
  • From bbsing@21:1/172 to deon on Sun Apr 23 04:09:30 2023
    On 20 Apr 2023, deon said the following...
    Re: Re: Novell NetWare fax server
    By: bbsing to Commodore Clifford on Wed Apr 19 2023 11:24 pm

    On a side note I had the discs for netware 4.x and 3.14 and I think I g those away in December 2022 to re-pc. I got depressed and just started purging stuff, and didn't realize I wanted to upload that software to B systems.

    Did you, by any chance, keep the 4.x license disk? It seems the license key for 4.x is hard to find...



    I could have sworn I made copies of those discs and the serials. But I can
    ask the crew and re-pc if they still have it.
    I went searching on my systems online for the disc/images/iso files but my searches came up fruitless. I have one system were I was attempting to
    archive all my floppy discs, but I have to pull it from storage.

    I'll have to continue to rummage through my collection.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A45 2020/02/18 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: The Bottomless Abyss BBS * bbs.bottomlessabyss.net (21:1/172)
  • From bbsing@21:1/172 to Commodore Clifford on Sun Apr 23 04:12:09 2023
    On 20 Apr 2023, Commodore Clifford said the following...

    Well, what I meant was if you wanted anything for it... Yeah, I'd like a copy... whether it's the originals or not is less meaningful if someone wants the actual original box/manuals/etc... Not that I wouldn't like them, but I focus my "original with box etc." to mostly Atari stuff or iconic games.

    I don't want anything for it, I just want to find it a home with someone who may want it for awhile and then find a new home as well if one so desired.

    I'll have to get pictures online to show the box and stuff.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A45 2020/02/18 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: The Bottomless Abyss BBS * bbs.bottomlessabyss.net (21:1/172)
  • From deon@21:2/116 to bbsing on Sun Apr 23 19:28:47 2023
    Re: Re: Novell NetWare fax server
    By: bbsing to deon on Sun Apr 23 2023 04:09 am

    Howdy,

    Did you, by any chance, keep the 4.x license disk? It seems the license key for 4.x is hard to find...

    I could have sworn I made copies of those discs and the serials. But I can ask the crew and re-pc if they still have it.
    I went searching on my systems online for the disc/images/iso files but my searches came up fruitless. I have one system were I was attempting to archive all my floppy discs, but I have to pull it from storage.

    I'll have to continue to rummage through my collection.

    If you come across it, and willing to share it, I'd appreciate it.


    ...ėīåļ
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Linux
    * Origin: I'm playing with ANSI+videotex - wanna play too? (21:2/116)
  • From bbsing@21:1/172 to deon on Mon Nov 27 21:59:41 2023
    On 20 Apr 2023, deon said the following...

    Did you, by any chance, keep the 4.x license disk? It seems the license key for 4.x is hard to find...


    I can't believe it, I thought I donated the original discs to re-pc, but ... but a few days ago I found a box I took out of storage, and I found my floppies: netware 4.1 license disk and the registration disk for 100 users.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A45 2020/02/18 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: The Bottomless Abyss BBS * bbs.bottomlessabyss.net (21:1/172)
  • From bbsing@21:1/172 to deon on Wed Nov 29 00:55:00 2023
    On 23 Apr 2023, deon said the following...

    Did you, by any chance, keep the 4.x license disk? It seems the li key for 4.x is hard to find...

    If you come across it, and willing to share it, I'd appreciate it.


    deon, I can't believe it, but I found:
    the reg disk, and the 100 user license disk -- netware 4.1

    Find it on bottomless abyss bbs.

    If you can send me a personal netmail there if you need help.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A45 2020/02/18 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: The Bottomless Abyss BBS * bbs.bottomlessabyss.net (21:1/172)
  • From deon@21:2/116 to bbsing on Thu Nov 30 09:31:50 2023
    Re: Novell NetWare fax server
    By: bbsing to deon on Wed Nov 29 2023 12:55 am

    deon, I can't believe it, but I found:
    the reg disk, and the 100 user license disk -- netware 4.1

    Find it on bottomless abyss bbs.

    Awesome, thanks.

    Logging on now!


    ...ėīåļ
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: I'm playing with ANSI+videotex - wanna play too? (21:2/116)
  • From bbsing@21:1/172 to deon on Thu Nov 30 12:40:59 2023
    On 30 Nov 2023, deon said the following...
    the reg disk, and the 100 user license disk -- netware 4.1

    deon, I found some more stuff I have. The install and document files.
    I'll have to go through the other stuff I found as well. I would love to put
    it up so it doesn't get lost forever.

    I think the last file I uploaded was for 4.10 not 4.1.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A45 2020/02/18 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: The Bottomless Abyss BBS * bbs.bottomlessabyss.net (21:1/172)
  • From deon@21:2/116 to bbsing on Fri Dec 1 08:52:02 2023
    Re: Re: Novell NetWare fax server
    By: bbsing to deon on Thu Nov 30 2023 12:40 pm

    On 30 Nov 2023, deon said the following...
    the reg disk, and the 100 user license disk -- netware 4.1

    deon, I found some more stuff I have. The install and document files.
    I'll have to go through the other stuff I found as well. I would love to put it up so it doesn't get lost forever.

    I think the last file I uploaded was for 4.10 not 4.1.

    That should still be OK though right?

    I'm going to have a play this weekend if I can get some time.

    In the mean time, I just went over to winworld (which has the CD but no license disks) - and there is a comment about 4.2 CD with a license disk as well. (But it also says somebody had problems with it, by not having a base license - so hopefully yours is the missing piece :)


    ...ėīåļ
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: I'm playing with ANSI+videotex - wanna play too? (21:2/116)
  • From bbsing@21:1/172 to deon on Fri Dec 1 01:36:24 2023

    I think the last file I uploaded was for 4.10 not 4.1.

    That should still be OK though right?

    I'm not sure.. I haven't used netware in a really really really long time.

    let me know if it works. The stuff I have was from copies of original disks, that I can't find yet. I really think I gave those to re-pc during a moment
    of insanity, so no original envelopes. The software disks came in a white envelope with serial and other things in it, and the og floppies had info
    on them. I tried to copy that onto my backup copies of the disks.

    Anyway long story short, please let me know if the reg and license works.

    I'm going to keep digging around for what I have.

    I'm going to have a play this weekend if I can get some time.

    In the mean time, I just went over to winworld (which has the CD but no license disks) - and there is a comment about 4.2 CD with a license disk as well. (But it also says somebody had problems with it, by not having
    a base license - so hopefully yours is the missing piece :)


    winworld ... is that a bbs?

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A45 2020/02/18 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: The Bottomless Abyss BBS * bbs.bottomlessabyss.net (21:1/172)
  • From deon@21:2/116 to bbsing on Fri Dec 1 18:15:48 2023
    Re: Re: Novell NetWare fax server
    By: bbsing to deon on Fri Dec 01 2023 01:36 am

    winworld ... is that a bbs?

    Nope, this...

    https://winworldpc.com/home

    Lots of old OSes :)


    ...ėīåļ
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: I'm playing with ANSI+videotex - wanna play too? (21:2/116)
  • From deon@21:2/116 to bbsing on Sat Dec 16 00:00:46 2023
    Re: Re: Novell NetWare fax server
    By: bbsing to deon on Fri Dec 01 2023 01:36 am

    I think the last file I uploaded was for 4.10 not 4.1.

    That should still be OK though right?

    let me know if it works. The stuff I have was from copies of original disks, that I can't find yet. I really think I gave those to re-pc during a moment of insanity, so no original envelopes. The software disks came in a white envelope with serial and other things in it, and the og floppies had info
    on them. I tried to copy that onto my backup copies of the disks.

    So I tried your 100 user license disk and it does work.

    It is only for Netware 4.1 - I first tried to install 4.11 and it wouldnt accept it during the install.

    I also tried Netware 4.2, but it wanted a "base license" (? I think that is what it wanted), so wouldnt accept it.

    So googled and found a Netware 4.1 CD, installed and it works.

    (Had to figure out how to get PCNET32 drivers from the 4.11 CD onto the 4.1 environment so that I could connect to it.)

    So it seems I can only be at 4.1 (even tried upgrading to 4.11 afterwards but it went back to a 2 user license).

    Anyway, this is still super useful for me, so thanks again...


    ...ėīåļ
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: I'm playing with ANSI+videotex - wanna play too? (21:2/116)
  • From bbsing@21:1/172 to deon on Tue Dec 26 01:28:58 2023
    On 16 Dec 2023, deon said the following...
    So I tried your 100 user license disk and it does work.

    I'm glad it works. My hand writing from many many years ago on faded paper its hard for me to tell what version it was.
    So googled and found a Netware 4.1 CD, installed and it works.

    I have some ISO images I created recently but I haven't made time to get them online. I've been busy enough fixing stuff at home I haven't made time to get software on the nets. I'm glad you found a version.

    Anyway, this is still super useful for me, so thanks again...

    when I get stuff together I'll let you know. I'm happy to help out if I can and keep our community active.

    ... When all else fails, read the instructions

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: The Bottomless Abyss BBS * bbs.bottomlessabyss.net (21:1/172)