Hi! I'm actualy using a native Win 98se installation as the base, but I am to try it soon without it... I got Office 2K to run and with a special "fake_windows" script i got IE to work too, (not with the Win98se installation) Try to use the --debugmsg -all --debugmsg +loaddll and se what files to copy to the fakewindows dir.. don't use shell,shell32,gui32 and thows as native or you'll get problems ;) If you got more then 56K i can send you a copy of all the DLLs in the windows/system and the native registerfiles (user.dat and system.dat) if you feel like trying that,, or just copy your own 98 dir... it works for me... //Sven -----Original Message----- From: wine-users-admin@winehq.com [mailto:wine-users-admin@winehq.com]On Behalf Of Jason Voegele Sent: Friday, March 28, 2003 6:24 PM To: wine-users@winehq.com Subject: Suggestions for a Working WINE Installation Hello fellow Wine users. Taking a look at the screenshots on winehq.com and seeing people who have Internet Explorer and Office 2000 and various games running under Linux has gotten me quite jealous. :-) I've been trying to do these things myself, thus far without any success, and I'm hoping one of you lucky ones can help me find my way Windows/Linux integration. Here's my situation. I've got a dual-boot system with both Libranet (Debian) GNU/Linux and Windows 2000 installed and working. I installed Wine "stand-alone" without pointing it to the NTFS partition where Win2K is installed, because I've read that Wine doesn't deal well with using Win2K (and other NT based systems) as a basis. Using this setup, I'm able to get basic things like Notepad and WinZip to run under Linux, but attempts to install various things like Internet Explorer, Office 97 or 2000, or EditPlus (my favorite text editor) have failed miserably. So reading through winehq.com, and discovering the possibility of using native DLLs, I decided to try to use some Windows 98 DLLs in place of the built-in Wine versions. Now, I don't actually have Windows 98 installed on my machine, so I copied the following files from a Windows 98 machine I have access to at work: COMMCTRL.DLL, COMCTL32.DLL COMMDLG.DLL, COMDLG32.DLL CRTDLL.DLL, MSVCRT.DLL MSVIDEO.DLL, MSVFW32.DLL SHELL.DLL, SHELL32.DLL REGEDIT.EXE, WINHELP.EXE, WINHELP32.EXE I copied these files to my Wine version of C:\Windows\System (except the *.exe files, which I put in C:\Windows), and then used the DllOverides section of the Wine config file to tell Wine to use the native versions of the above files. This didn't really seem to change the situation at all, since I still am unable to install IE or Office. I used the directions at frankscorner.org to attempt to install IE5.5, and simply used the Office setup.exe to try to install Office. Now, I'm not really asking you to solve my specific problems, but what I would like to know is, for all of you people who've been successful installing and running these things, what is your setup, and how did you go about doing it? Thanks for your help and patience. -- Jason Voegele "There is an essential core at the center of each man and woman that remains unaltered no matter how life's externals may be transformed or recombined. But it's smaller than we think." -- Gene Wolfe, The Book of the Long Sun _______________________________________________ wine-users mailing list wine-users@winehq.com http://www.winehq.com/mailman/listinfo/wine-users _______________________________________________ wine-users mailing list wine-users@winehq.com http://www.winehq.com/mailman/listinfo/wine-users