May 1998
Beginner
1128 pages
30h 26m
English
For many users, a full-blown network is overkill (and expensive overkill, to boot). If you want to just share files between a desktop machine and a notebook, it makes no sense to install network interface cards and cables and run through the whole network configuration rigmarole.
On the other hand, using floppy disks to transfer files between two machines, even with the useful synchronization features built into Briefcase, is still a relatively tedious affair.
For easier file transfers, Windows 98 provides a solution that's simpler to implement than a network connection and is less cumbersome than floppy disks: Direct Cable Connection.
Direct Cable Connection is a network client that doesn't ...