I remember copying a game onto floppies from DOS, but I can no longer remember the command that tells it to split the file onto multiple disks because it’s too big for 2.88 MB
funny how i didn’t see all the shit you had to go through back in the day just to pirate a <10MB game as a pain in the ass that i see it as now, yet i’d still go back to those days in a heartbeat if i could
It was called spanning and was usually done with a third party utility like xcopy or pkzip, but I am pretty sure MS backup did it as well. I don’t think you could do it with DOS copy command through v6.22.
Oh yeah, that name brought it back-- it was pkzip for sure. Still don’t remember the exact argument at the end of the line that would split it but the basic was just the same copy command format as DOS used (pkzip c:\xyz*.* a:)
I suppose I could look it up but that’s more effort than I’m looking to spend on old DOS commands right now :)
I remember copying a game onto floppies from DOS, but I can no longer remember the command that tells it to split the file onto multiple disks because it’s too big for 2.88 MB
funny how i didn’t see all the shit you had to go through back in the day just to pirate a <10MB game as a pain in the ass that i see it as now, yet i’d still go back to those days in a heartbeat if i could
Check out moneybags over here with his 2.88mb
I have no idea what it would have been in a Windows/DOS environment, but
https://www.man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/split.1.html
It was called spanning and was usually done with a third party utility like xcopy or pkzip, but I am pretty sure MS backup did it as well. I don’t think you could do it with DOS copy command through v6.22.
Oh yeah, that name brought it back-- it was pkzip for sure. Still don’t remember the exact argument at the end of the line that would split it but the basic was just the same copy command format as DOS used (pkzip c:\xyz*.* a:)
I suppose I could look it up but that’s more effort than I’m looking to spend on old DOS commands right now :)