Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!sun-barr!rutgers!zodiac!amatthews From: amatthews@zodiac.rutgers.edu Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.misc Subject: networking a Toshiba 1000 and an Amiga Message-ID: <815.28146edf@zodiac.rutgers.edu> Date: 23 Apr 91 17:29:03 GMT Organization: Rutgers University Computing Services Lines: 32 I have an A1000/2.5MB computer. This will soon have an 80MB IDE Hard drive. I have a Toshiba T1000/.5MB notebook computer. It has not external floppy, no ram expansion, however it is hooked up to a nice composite monitor. A hard drive for this thing (or anything else for that matter) would cost as much as a new pcXT. I have noticed that MSDOS machines and Mac's are networked together quite easily via Appletalk at my school. All they really do is share a big hard drive, and a printer or two. Question: Is there anyway I can hook my Toshiba to my A1000, just so I could use the hard disk that is mounted on the Amiga as a file server for the notebook. The easiest thing I can think of to do just to push files back and forth on copper wiring would be to just connect the serial ports together (reversing the pins of course) and use a term program at each end (I suppose you could call that a null modem cable). However, this would be sort of silly since I can just write Amiga data to an MSDOS formatted disk and plop it right into the notebook. What I would really like to be able to do is just connect two ports together, preferably the serial ports, and have something like drive E: on the laptop being a route to the hard drive on the Amiga through the serial port. This doesn't sound like such a hard thing to do. I would suppose that you could just start up a background task on the amiga, much like I am able to open up a CLI window on a remote terminal -- instead of ascii, binary data would move back and forth. Then some sort of little program to do similar things would run on the Toshiba. If the software were available, I could turn my stunted little Toshiba into a "real" pc, for the price of a cable. Anyone know of such software? I want my own network :) --Alex