REMOTE DRiVE v1.1 Easy access
REMOTE DRiVE is the Emergency-Disk-Access tool No. 1 for Windows NT/2000 and Windows XP. If Windows NT/2000 or Windows XP machine fails to boot and you need important data very fast you can use to copy them with a very high speed over a serial or a parallel link cable. Additional you can run User Manager, CIA Unerase, REGEDIT, or CHKDSK on the remote drive or delete defect driver in the HOST-Systemdirectory. The HOST and CLIENT machines must be connected with a standard parallel link cable or null-modem serial cable.
Included User Manager for Windows NT/2000/XP allows you to change lost or forgotten administrative password (as well as for any other user), unlock account and shows detailed information about all users which are present on your system.
REMOTE DRiVE is a two part solution. The REMOTE DRiVE HOST is a single boot floppy that can be created within the REMOTE DRiVE CLIENT. The HOST offers the CLIENT to mount any partition like FAT / FAT32 or NTFS.
The REMOTE DRiVE CLIENT is a pure Windows application that is installed on the administrator's computer whth Windows NT4/2000 or Windows XP.
Here's how it works.
REMOTE DRiVE is the Emergency-Disk-Access tool No. 1 for Windows NT/2000 and Windows XP. If Windows NT/2000 or Windows XP machine fails to boot and you need important data very fast you can use to copy them with a very high speed over a serial or a parallel link cable. Additionally, you can run User Manager, CIA Unerase, REGEDIT, or CHKDSK on the remote drive or delete defect driver in the HOST-Systemdirectory. The HOST and CLIENT machines must be connected with a standard parallel link cable or null-modem serial cable.
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The link to their WOL freeware is
http://www.matcode.com/wol.htm
Wake-on-LAN Version: 1.0 free!!!
This small command line utility makes possible to switch on a computer from a second one by sending a "Magic Packet". Both of computers can be located on the same LAN or on the different LAN segments.
Requirements to use the WOL (Wake-On-LAN)
An ATX motherboard with an onboard, 3-pin "WOL" connector.
An ATX power supply that meets ATX 2.01 specifications.
A network card that can support WOL with its cable to the motherboard properly installed.
In the BIOS Power Management, you must enable the LAN Wakeup option.
How to use MC-WOL
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2 comments:
I gave this a try. It works ok.
the wake on lan is the one I tried that worked ok. I didn't try the remote drive but it sounds good. Maybe somewhere in the future I'll give it a run or come accross it at a friends network. If I do I'll be sure to report back to let you know how it worked.
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