When I originally installed EMC9, I chose Drag to Disc. I have now removed that and want to use DLA instead. But how do I install/repair DLA?
There is currently no indication of DLA availability when I right click on the drive in Windows explorer.
How do I install/repair DLA in EMC9?
Started by
Greg1
, Aug 17 2007 07:27 AM
2 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 17 August 2007 - 07:27 AM
#2
Posted 17 August 2007 - 07:57 AM
DLA and Drag to Disc are basically the same thing.
If you have Windows 2000 SP4, the suite installs DLA, if you have XP, it installs D2D
This is down (to the best of my knowledge) to compatibility reasons
Pause for a few while someone posts up regarding the total unreliability of any packet writing progrem
If you have Windows 2000 SP4, the suite installs DLA, if you have XP, it installs D2D
This is down (to the best of my knowledge) to compatibility reasons
Pause for a few while someone posts up regarding the total unreliability of any packet writing progrem
If it ain't broke, fiddle with it until it breaks, then fiddle with it until you get it fixed
"Rincewind could scream for mercy in nineteen languages and just scream in another forty-four "
"If computers get too powerful, we can organize them into a committee; that will do them in."
“Computers have enabled people to make more mistakes faster than almost any invention in history, with the possible exception of tequila and hand guns.” — Mitch Ratcliffe
Daithi
Home Brew computer
Intel I7 950 on Gigabyte X58A UD3R mobo
12 GB Three Channel DDRAM
Radeon HD4850 512 MB GDR3 graphics
Signalink USB Audio Codec for ham radio connection
1 x 160 GB, 1 x 330 GB, 1 x 400 GB IDE drives
4 x 250 GB SATA 2
LG HL-DT-ST GGW-H20L BD-RE drive
22" Acer P223W monitor
EMC 7.5 on Windows XP 32 SP3
EMC10 on Windows XP64 SP2
Creator 2011 on Windows 7 Ultimate
ECD6 on Gentoo Linux (running under VMWare)
"Rincewind could scream for mercy in nineteen languages and just scream in another forty-four "
"If computers get too powerful, we can organize them into a committee; that will do them in."
“Computers have enabled people to make more mistakes faster than almost any invention in history, with the possible exception of tequila and hand guns.” — Mitch Ratcliffe
Daithi
Home Brew computer
Intel I7 950 on Gigabyte X58A UD3R mobo
12 GB Three Channel DDRAM
Radeon HD4850 512 MB GDR3 graphics
Signalink USB Audio Codec for ham radio connection
1 x 160 GB, 1 x 330 GB, 1 x 400 GB IDE drives
4 x 250 GB SATA 2
LG HL-DT-ST GGW-H20L BD-RE drive
22" Acer P223W monitor
EMC 7.5 on Windows XP 32 SP3
EMC10 on Windows XP64 SP2
Creator 2011 on Windows 7 Ultimate
ECD6 on Gentoo Linux (running under VMWare)
#3
Posted 17 August 2007 - 08:49 AM
QUOTE (gi7omy @ Aug 17 2007, 07:57 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
DLA and Drag to Disc are basically the same thing.
If you have Windows 2000 SP4, the suite installs DLA, if you have XP, it installs D2D
This is down (to the best of my knowledge) to compatibility reasons
Pause for a few while someone posts up regarding the total unreliability of any packet writing progrem
If you have Windows 2000 SP4, the suite installs DLA, if you have XP, it installs D2D
This is down (to the best of my knowledge) to compatibility reasons
Pause for a few while someone posts up regarding the total unreliability of any packet writing progrem
I am on XP SP2/Media Center 2005 and had been using DLA 4.95 with success for some time, but recently started getting intermittant BSODs on boot or shutdown, so I decided to upgrade. I have a number of utilities that rely on some form of packet writing software and I have found (in the past) that DLA seemed to be the most reliable.
QUOTE (Greg1 @ Aug 17 2007, 08:47 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
I am on XP SP2/Media Center 2005 and had been using DLA 4.95 with success for some time, but recently started getting intermittant BSODs on boot or shutdown, so I decided to upgrade. I have a number of utilities that rely on some form of packet writing software and I have found (in the past) that DLA seemed to be the most reliable.
And the readme with EMC9 says DLA 5.2.? and D2D are incompatible, so I'm assuming I can still get to DLA directly somehow.
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