To improve the usability for the DFSee product, bootable solutions will be offered
like a bootable CDROM and diskette-image.
The bootable solutions have the big advantage that they can be used for disk-recovery tasks
on any system that supports booting from CD or diskette, without the need to install anything
on the (possibly damaged) harddisk.
Full versions of DFSee will be available on a bootable CDROM for a small additional cost compared to the standard version, and will include a standard registration-key on the CD-ROM.
These bootable CD's and diskettes are based on FreeDOS , but other alternatives are being investigated too.
The perfect recovery solution!
With a bootable FreeDOS and DFSDOS available, it can be used for recovery tasks without having to install anything!
The CD includes a unique PERMANENT registration-key.
Buy the CDROM here or just click on the large CDROM image ...
If you have no DFSee registration yet, just buy the complete CDROM version that includes the standard registration (or burn your own for free).
Only if you already have a 16.x registraton, you can get the CDROM
for existing 16.x users.
So when ordering this, make sure that:
If you have an older registration, get the 16.x CDROM at the lowest cost by:
If you are a registred 16.x user, and you can burn your own CD's, this might be the best recovery solution for you.
This is a ZIP file with the ISO image for the bootable CDROM, plus
a small program that is used to add your existing registration key to
this image.
Instructions are included in the ZIP file as well.
The bare ISO image contains a TEMPORARY key, so do not burn it to a CD without adding your own key!

For evaluation, or simply to get a nice bootable recovery solution, this image
will get you a bootable FreeDOS diskette with DFSDOS.
If you are a registred 16.x user, you can add your key, otherwise you can use the
diskette for evaluation purposes only.
This is a ZIP file with a self-extracting diskette-image (Thanks to Daniel Valot).
It can be extracted on any platform capable of running DOS or OS2 textmode executables.
Simply run the enclosed 'bootdisk.exe' and it will write to a (formatted) diskette,
or use 'bootdisk /h' for other usage ...