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Imagecast ic3
Imagecast ic3













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There was a free and full version, but no contact to purchase the full one which is strange for a free version. We're still not closer to discover the author of TH99. Well, with mr Haning, although he tweaked the versions to make them browsable easier, still has no idea who made it. This is awesome! If we can find whoever owns the copyright on it, we could potentially never have to worry about looking over our shoulders with this collection (not that I am, anymore.as far as I'm concerned, it's pretty old, and they haven't come forth yet, so, bleh).

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He says that they would like to know some of the copyright information so that they can maybe license the Total Hardware 1999 collection for redistribution. I've been contacted by the General Manager (!) of a company that is hosting a mirror of the collection on their servers. In 2003, he wrote in his "Old News" page: 160MB) and full one without thumbnails (ca.

Imagecast ic3 full version#

2004), mr Haning offered a full version (ca. First mirrors of a "full version" started to appear in 2002, like.

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Haning wrote about version of "a little under 15000 PC board settings" (see the "Original" link) so he was speaking about smaller one. archived here contained 14876 devices and the full one has 18655 devices. So there was a free and full version and what we usually see with pictures is a full one. DISTRIBUTION OF THIS PACKAGE IS UNLIMITEDįULL VERSION (630MB) HAS PRINTER-FRIENDLY HTML WITH LAYOUT GIF'S FOR EVERY CARDĪND THUMBNAIL PAGES FOR EASY IDENTIFICATION OF UNKNOWN CARDS. This file is dated May 2001 and its internals are from March 2000. The file, 2 or, is about 10MB and contains text-only version of TotalHardware 99. from here but I don't know how long it'll last. Haning" ( archived copy) who, as he wrote in his History page, found a free version of TotalHardware 99 without images. Let's see the history of TH99 in the Internet. Some group or individual had to work with documentation and even real hardware, as some parts are named "UNKNOWN", usually the manufacturer and type is designated in documentation. But who made it? Discovering, describing and documenting so much hardware required lots of time and resources (personally, for me this can be a really big fun). It is a website, now mirrored in many copies, which contains jumper settings for 18655 PC-related devices, from 8088-based XTs to Pentium II systems, the best ones in 1999. TotalHardware 99 is a great help for all of those who want to configure unknown PC component, board or drive. Pictured: Murray Haszard.Popular tags: Electronics (11), Linux (11), Hack (8), DIY (6), Other (6), Retrocomputing (6), Debian (5), Curiosities (4) Mr Crisford's lawyer, Alex Witten-Hannah, said the liquidators of Binary Research, accountants Gilligan Sheppard, had also been joined in the action because they had "assisted in dealing with the proceeds of the sale contrary to Mr Crisford's interests." A decision on whether any action should be taken against Symantec is deferred "pending the obtaining of further information." The case will go to a judicial conference in May. Following the sale of Ghost to Symantec, Binary Research was placed in voluntary liquidation. After two or three months Mr Crisford ceased involvement with Binary Research and subsequently developed a competing disk-cloning product - Imagecast IC3 - which is currently being sold by Innovative Software, the same United States distributor that sold Ghost. For several months he operated the Website when the company started selling Ghost via the Internet in 1996. The Business Herald understands Mr Crisford was an undischarged bankrupt when working for Binary Research. He had already developed a "partition" cloning program called LinkWiz two years before meeting Mr Crisford and adapted the program to do disk cloning. Asked about Mr Crisford's claim to the original idea, he said others had also suggested the idea of disk cloning to him.

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Mr Haszard rejected the claim, and said he and the other Binary Research shareholders joined in the action would defend their position vigorously. He claimed that while Mr Haszard was a good programmer, he did not have the creative idea.

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Mr Crisford told the Business Herald the idea for the cloning software called Ghost was his, resulting from his need to copy identical operating systems and software on to PCs that Binary Research rented to the North Shore City Council. A statement of claim filed on December 23 alleges Mr Crisford commissioned Mr Haszard to write the cloning software and had an oral agreement to pay him half the revenues of subsequent sales. The claim brought by John Crisford - a former employee of Mr Haszard's company Binary Research - alleges breach of copyright of the software.

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By Chris Barton Software developer Murray Haszard is being sued in the High Court for $US27.5 million - the proceeds of the sale of his Ghost cloning software to US company Symantec last June.















Imagecast ic3