Ghost Error Accessing Nemm.dos
an HP dc5750 with Broadcom Extreme Gigabit nic, this error appears: NET0111: Error accessing NEMM.DOS. TCP 1.0 not loaded. Tiny RFC 1.0 not loaded. I've tried with Linux and dos with no luck. But I've been able to install bw on other cpu's with this nic. What am I doing wrong? marzipan, Nov 9, 2006 #1 Brandon Active Member You probably need to update the NDIS drivers to the latest version. You will want to check the Device ID against the others in the DS to verify it is the same nic indeed. Brandon, Nov 9, 2006 #2 marzipan New Member Went to the Broadcom website and used the latest NDIS driver. Works!!! Thanks so much for the help.:woohoo: marzipan, Nov 15, 2006 #3 (You must log in or sign up to reply here.) Show Ignored Content Share This Page Tweet Your name or email address: Password: Forgot your password? Stay logged in Altirigos Home Forums > Deployment Solution > Imaging - Bootworks/Rdeploy > Home Home Quick Links Recent Activity What's New? Help Forums Forums Quick Links Search Forums What's New? Members Members Quick Links Registered Members Current Visitors Recent Activity Help Help Quick Links Smilies BB Codes Trophies Search titles only Posted by Member: Separate names with a comma. Newer Than: Search this thread only Search this forum only Display results as threads Useful Searches Recent Threads More... Style Altirigos Contact Us Home Top RSS Forum software by XenForo™ ©2011 XenForo Ltd. Terms and Rules
Français Deutsch 日本語 Español Help Video Screencast Help Deployment Server 6.9 - A Quick-Start Course, Part 2: Deployment Server Concepts Created: 30 Jun 2010 • Updated: 02 Jul 2010 | 2 comments Language TranslationsMachine TranslationsDeutsch Français Español 简体中文 日本語 ianatkin Trusted Advisor +1 1 Vote Login to vote Tweet This chapter will prepare the ground for some of the basic concepts which underpin Deployment Server's ability to deploy computers. In particular, we will formalise the idea that when imaging computers we need to manage two environments -the operating system our users work in, and the environment we use to image their computers. Computer Images Before we plough straight into Deployment Server's imaging environments, let's first clarify what imaging means in the context of computer deployment. A computer image is a file which represents all http://www.altirigos.com/forums/threads/error-accessing-nemm-dos.5067/ the data stored on a computer's hard drive. In its rawest form, you can create an image by sequentially dumping all the bytes from each sector of a computer's hard disk to a file. If you then wrote such an image back to the original hard disk, the drive's contents would be unaltered (hence why we use the term image). Raw images are rarely used though - storing each byte from a 50GB hard disk in a file will result in a file http://www.symantec.com/connect/articles/deployment-server-69-quick-start-course-part-2-deployment-server-concepts of 50GB in size! Image file sizes can certainly be a problem for modern computers, where disk capacities now exceed 500GB. That's not to say though that all the disk space is used -in fact in most scenarios the majority of a user's hard disk is empty. For example, if you consider a corporate desktop with a 500GB hard disk, it is entirely likely that only 30GB of its used. A raw disk image in such a scenario will therefore store a lot of zeros unnecessarily. To get around this, we can be a bit smarter and examine the disk at the higher level of the partitions and the enclosed files systems, saving files rather than sector bits directly into the image file. With such methods, an image of a 500GB hard disk which has only 30GB used will result in an image around 30GB in size. But can we be smarter still? How about we store the files with compression? Our image now becomes in effect a zip archive and our disk image can now be reduced even further, perhaps by a factor of 2 or 3, taking our image of a 500GB disk (with perhaps 30GB of utilised space) down to a file perhaps no more than 12GB in size. Much more manageable I think you'll agree. Most computer images are in fact created in this way -at the file system level and with compression. This has two advantages, The images can be uplo
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for Help Receive Real-Time Help Create a Freelance Project Hire for a Full Time Job Ways to Get Help Ask a Question Ask for Help Receive Real-Time Help Create a Freelance Project Hire for a Full Time Job Ways to Get Help Expand Search Submit Close Search Login Join Today Products BackProducts Gigs Live Careers Vendor Services Groups Website Testing Store Headlines Experts Exchange > Questions > i need help creating a USB flash drive boot disk for a Latitude E6400. Want to Advertise Here? Solved i need help creating a USB flash drive boot disk for a Latitude E6400. Posted on 2009-10-28 Storage Software 2 Verified Solutions 8 Comments 591 Views Last Modified: 2013-12-02 I have tried BartPE and NetBoot Utilities, and nothing will work. I created boot disks for the D630, and it was not this big of a hassle. i do have the newest drivers from dell.com for the E6400. the way our current disks are setup, is they boot the machine, you enter domain username and password, and then it loads up ghost automatically. in ghost, you can browse the mapped drive the disk created, and install an image. in the past, i just had to make the disk bootable, copy over all the files from a previous disk, and then add the new drivers, and change any pointers to the drivers. now, i'm getting "Error Accessing NEMM.DOS. TCP 1.0 not loaded." and Error accessing NEMM.DOS. Tiny RFC 1.0 not loaded also, error - "error loading device driver protman.dos" need help... 0 Question by:TeethGuys Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Google LVL 63 Best Solution bySysExpert 1) Get the latest BIOS for the E6400. 2) Check the USB options, try changing the legacy related stuff. 3) Does it work off of a CD ( perhaps via an external USB CDROM drive ? ) I hope this Go to Solution 8 Comments LVL 15 Overall: Level 15 Storage Software 2 Message Expert Comment by:vahiid2009-10-28 Sounds to me like a NIC card drive issue. Check out this post: http://www.experts-exchange.com/Storage/Backup_Restore/Norton_Ghost/Q_24044744.html ---- I have found a solution that has worked for all my various NICs transparently. Set up a mapped drive to your shared folder. and put the DOS Ghost.exe files there. Run ghost via the shared folder. The Universal TCP/IP Network Bootdisk is a DOS http://www.netbootdisk.com/ other opti