VOGONS


First post, by beastlike

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Hello,

I have a Windows ME computer which has software that drops files onto a thumb drive. There is no monitor/keyboard/mouse, and I do not have access to remote into the PC. There are no network/parallel/serial/any other ports available on the Windows ME computer, just the one USB port.

Instead of plugging a thumb drive into this computer, I'd like to plug in some sort of cable or device that will allow me to connect another PC, so the ME PC drops files into what it thinks is a Mass Storage Device, but really it's a transfer cable or some device like it, that dumps files onto a Windows 10 PC.

There is this thing: https://www.usbgear.com/link/usb_link_cable.html - but I think it needs software to be installed on the Windows 98 side, which I cannot do.

There is the Pi Zero, https://www.raspberrypi.org/magpi/pi-zero-w-s … sb-flash-drive/ - but I'm not sure if I could easily hook that up to another PC simultaneously.

Any ideas or suggestions?

Thank you!

Reply 1 of 14, by Fusion

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Wow never heard, or knew you could do that. Interesting. I can't help you unfortunately.

Pentium III @ 1.28Ghz - Intel SE440xBX-2 - 384MB PC100 - ATi Radeon DDR 64MB @ 200/186 - SB Live! 5.1 - Windows ME

Reply 2 of 14, by Jo22

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I remember that thing from several catalogues (Pearl, Conrad Electronic etc). Well, at least a siimilar model (iMac-style/blue-transparent case). Must have been circa 2002 or so, before Win XP was popular..

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In what to one race is no time at all, another race can rise and fall..." - The Minstrel

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Reply 3 of 14, by Caluser2000

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What about across over cables and usb to RJ45 converter? Why can't you use a usb hub for keyboard and mouse? If there is a video port why can't you attatch a cheap smalll LCD monito? https://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-Ethernet-100Ba … 0/dp/B000LWESXW Any drivers should be able to be loaded via the hub if win9x drivers exist.

There's a glitch in the matrix.
A founding member of the 286 appreciation society.
Apparently 32-bit is dead and nobody likes P4s.
Of course, as always, I'm open to correction...😉

Reply 4 of 14, by beastlike

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Caluser2000 wrote:

What about across over cables and usb to RJ45 converter? Why can't you use a usb hub for keyboard and mouse? If there is a video port why can't you attatch a cheap smalll LCD monito? https://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-Ethernet-100Ba … 0/dp/B000LWESXW Any drivers should be able to be loaded via the hub if win9x drivers exist.

Unfortunately, there is no video port 🙁

Reply 5 of 14, by bregolin

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beastlike wrote:
Hello, […]
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Hello,

I have a Windows ME computer which has software that drops files onto a thumb drive. There is no monitor/keyboard/mouse, and I do not have access to remote into the PC. There are no network/parallel/serial/any other ports available on the Windows ME computer, just the one USB port.

Instead of plugging a thumb drive into this computer, I'd like to plug in some sort of cable or device that will allow me to connect another PC, so the ME PC drops files into what it thinks is a Mass Storage Device, but really it's a transfer cable or some device like it, that dumps files onto a Windows 10 PC.

There is this thing: https://www.usbgear.com/link/usb_link_cable.html - but I think it needs software to be installed on the Windows 98 side, which I cannot do.

There is the Pi Zero, https://www.raspberrypi.org/magpi/pi-zero-w-s … sb-flash-drive/ - but I'm not sure if I could easily hook that up to another PC simultaneously.

Any ideas or suggestions?

Thank you!

Wow.. I'm really curious about your setup- do you mind explaining why it does what it does?

IBM Aptiva 2162 - P55 166 MMX, 32MB, CS4237B + Wavetable, ATI Mach64 2MB / Win98SE
Custom PIII 750, 64MB, SB AWE64, Voodoo 3 3000 AGP / Win98SE
Sony Vaio z505 SuperSlim - PIII 550, 192MB, YMF744, NeoMagic 256AV+ / Win98SE

Reply 6 of 14, by Caluser2000

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USB to vga cables exist.

There's a glitch in the matrix.
A founding member of the 286 appreciation society.
Apparently 32-bit is dead and nobody likes P4s.
Of course, as always, I'm open to correction...😉

Reply 7 of 14, by torindkflt

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Even if a cable that worked exactly like this existed (not saying they don't, rather that all of the ones I'm aware of required special software on both ends), you would still require a monitor, keyboard and mouse on the WinME machine in order to do the actual file copying. None of the USB data transfer cables I have seen were designed with a "headless" system in mind.

Reply 8 of 14, by Caluser2000

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There's probably headers on the mobo to fit extra out puts. Open it up and have a look.

There's a glitch in the matrix.
A founding member of the 286 appreciation society.
Apparently 32-bit is dead and nobody likes P4s.
Of course, as always, I'm open to correction...😉

Reply 9 of 14, by Bullmecha

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I am very curious to see this ME rig of yours, can you toss a few pics up ?

Just a guy with a bad tinkering habit.
i5 6600k Main Rig
too many to list old school rigs

Reply 10 of 14, by Zup

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beastlike wrote:
Hello, […]
Show full quote

Hello,

I have a Windows ME computer which has software that drops files onto a thumb drive. There is no monitor/keyboard/mouse, and I do not have access to remote into the PC. There are no network/parallel/serial/any other ports available on the Windows ME computer, just the one USB port.

Instead of plugging a thumb drive into this computer, I'd like to plug in some sort of cable or device that will allow me to connect another PC, so the ME PC drops files into what it thinks is a Mass Storage Device, but really it's a transfer cable or some device like it, that dumps files onto a Windows 10 PC.

There is this thing: https://www.usbgear.com/link/usb_link_cable.html - but I think it needs software to be installed on the Windows 98 side, which I cannot do.

There is the Pi Zero, https://www.raspberrypi.org/magpi/pi-zero-w-s … sb-flash-drive/ - but I'm not sure if I could easily hook that up to another PC simultaneously.

Any ideas or suggestions?

Thank you!

USB storage is a sub-class of USB devices... if your computer doesn't have drivers for an specific device and find that it belongs to a "compatible" class (audio, storage, HID) it will try to use the "generic" drivers. I guess installing the proper device driver will work... why don't you post your device ID?

On the other hand, there are USB to ethernet adapters (I got two) that have drivers for Windows 98/Me. Maybe you could try to connect one of those on your computer.

I have traveled across the universe and through the years to find Her.
Sometimes going all the way is just a start...

I'm selling some stuff!

Reply 11 of 14, by Caluser2000

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Bullmecha wrote:

I am very curious to see this ME rig of yours, can you toss a few pics up ?

I'm beginning to believe this is just a troll.

There's a glitch in the matrix.
A founding member of the 286 appreciation society.
Apparently 32-bit is dead and nobody likes P4s.
Of course, as always, I'm open to correction...😉

Reply 12 of 14, by Ozzuneoj

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I have a "USB Transfer Cable" that my brother and I used back in ~2006 for transferring files to a project PC we built. It was advertised as being red but when I opened the box I was surprised to find a thing that looked like a hot-pink jump rope. Crazy looking contraption, but it worked great. Much less fiddly than networking, and was much faster for large transfers than using the flash drives available at the time.

I just dug it out of my box of USB cables and on my main Windows 10 machine it is still detected and installs itself as a CD-ROM drive called EasyCopy-Net, or in Device Manager it is listed under CDROMs as OTi EasyCopy-Net USB Device. When you "open" the drive it always runs the application for transferring files. It actually works incredibly well.

Crazy thing doesn't have a name brand or any markings on it anywhere, so I don't know what it was actually called (or where I bought it) but, it does seem to work, and I vaguely recall it being labeled as a Windows XP device. I think it requires USB storage drivers to be installed on older operating systems. I just connected it between my Windows 10 system and my Windows 98SE tester system (which has mass storage drivers already) and on the 98 machine it was detected as a USB mass storage device. Once the mass storage driver finished installing (I just had to click next a couple times) it then found the EasyCopy-Net device which proceeded to install itself as a CDROM drive with no interaction. When I open the drive, it runs the application and I can see all the files on my Windows 10 machine. It's kind of crazy how it lets this old 98 machine have completely free access to all of the files on all of my drives. Even system files and user data folders are totally accessible (though I'm logged into the only password protected account, so I'm not sure how it handles accounts that aren't logged in currently).

Anyway, yes these devices exist and they work. Now that I'm reminded of how convenient they are, it makes my cobbled FTP sharing setup here seem a bit redundant, since I'm only ever sharing files from about 3 feet away, which this thing does without any fuss at all... 🤣

... as to whether you'd be able to make this work with no interaction with one of the PCs, I highly doubt it. If this is for some kind of kiosk at a retail store or something, there has to be some other way to interface with the machine. If there isn't, then I don't know how it was ever even installed in the first place. The most astonishing thing about this whole scenario, is that a system that cannot be interacted with in any way (no display or inputs) has been operating since Windows ME would have been relevant... and apparently no one has had to ever service it??? An ME machine would presumably only have USB 1.1 support anyway, so even if you could use a hub to connect a USB display and a keyboard, I can't imagine it'd be too usable on a 12mbps shared interface.

If the system can have a monitor and kb\m connected temporarily, the scenario gets more feasible, but I'm not sure if any of these transfer cables are quite as transparent to the host PCs as you'd like. For example, when I access mine (G: drive) via the command prompt or by going to that drive in Explorer, it just shows it as a CD with an autorun.inf and an .exe file, occupying ~400KB with no free space. So, it doesn't seem to work in the way you'd need it to. If you can tell the machine to put it's files into a specific folder on the machine's hard drive (rather than to an external drive), then a transfer cable like this would at least give another PC access to those files remotely through the USB port. They won't be dropped directly onto the remote PC however. Also, the application does need to be running on both computers, but as long as autorun is working simply plugging it into the headless system would run the application and allow transfers to and from it.

Now for some blitting from the back buffer.

Reply 13 of 14, by beastlike

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Ozzuneoj wrote:
I have a "USB Transfer Cable" that my brother and I used back in ~2006 for transferring files to a project PC we built. It was a […]
Show full quote

I have a "USB Transfer Cable" that my brother and I used back in ~2006 for transferring files to a project PC we built. It was advertised as being red but when I opened the box I was surprised to find a thing that looked like a hot-pink jump rope. Crazy looking contraption, but it worked great. Much less fiddly than networking, and was much faster for large transfers than using the flash drives available at the time.

I just dug it out of my box of USB cables and on my main Windows 10 machine it is still detected and installs itself as a CD-ROM drive called EasyCopy-Net, or in Device Manager it is listed under CDROMs as OTi EasyCopy-Net USB Device. When you "open" the drive it always runs the application for transferring files. It actually works incredibly well.

Crazy thing doesn't have a name brand or any markings on it anywhere, so I don't know what it was actually called (or where I bought it) but, it does seem to work, and I vaguely recall it being labeled as a Windows XP device. I think it requires USB storage drivers to be installed on older operating systems. I just connected it between my Windows 10 system and my Windows 98SE tester system (which has mass storage drivers already) and on the 98 machine it was detected as a USB mass storage device. Once the mass storage driver finished installing (I just had to click next a couple times) it then found the EasyCopy-Net device which proceeded to install itself as a CDROM drive with no interaction. When I open the drive, it runs the application and I can see all the files on my Windows 10 machine. It's kind of crazy how it lets this old 98 machine have completely free access to all of the files on all of my drives. Even system files and user data folders are totally accessible (though I'm logged into the only password protected account, so I'm not sure how it handles accounts that aren't logged in currently).

Anyway, yes these devices exist and they work. Now that I'm reminded of how convenient they are, it makes my cobbled FTP sharing setup here seem a bit redundant, since I'm only ever sharing files from about 3 feet away, which this thing does without any fuss at all... 🤣

... as to whether you'd be able to make this work with no interaction with one of the PCs, I highly doubt it. If this is for some kind of kiosk at a retail store or something, there has to be some other way to interface with the machine. If there isn't, then I don't know how it was ever even installed in the first place. The most astonishing thing about this whole scenario, is that a system that cannot be interacted with in any way (no display or inputs) has been operating since Windows ME would have been relevant... and apparently no one has had to ever service it??? An ME machine would presumably only have USB 1.1 support anyway, so even if you could use a hub to connect a USB display and a keyboard, I can't imagine it'd be too usable on a 12mbps shared interface.

If the system can have a monitor and kb\m connected temporarily, the scenario gets more feasible, but I'm not sure if any of these transfer cables are quite as transparent to the host PCs as you'd like. For example, when I access mine (G: drive) via the command prompt or by going to that drive in Explorer, it just shows it as a CD with an autorun.inf and an .exe file, occupying ~400KB with no free space. So, it doesn't seem to work in the way you'd need it to. If you can tell the machine to put it's files into a specific folder on the machine's hard drive (rather than to an external drive), then a transfer cable like this would at least give another PC access to those files remotely through the USB port. They won't be dropped directly onto the remote PC however. Also, the application does need to be running on both computers, but as long as autorun is working simply plugging it into the headless system would run the application and allow transfers to and from it.

Thank you for your reply!

It sounds like it's doing similar to one of those SanDisk cruzers from the mid oughts, which had a faked CD drive that would mount when you plugged it in, and they used that to autorun an application, back when XP would let CDs autorun applications like that. Was pretty cool little hack. Then there was that app that let you load your own ISO so you could run your own application. Pretty cool.

As far as the requirement of needing to be at and interact with the PC to make the cable work, it looks like that's just the reality of most of these cables.

The "teensy" boards let you tell the computer what type of device it is, so they can register as midi/hid/(I believe mass storage device). I'd probably need to do something like that if I'm going to bother going forward.

Thanks again!