Turn folders in to virtual drives
Platform : Windows 98, Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows XP
Type: freeware
Manufacturer: J. A. Associates
Size: 1.8MB
Rating: 0
Verdict:
System Requirements:
This is the software publisher’s description.
The DOS SUBST command is a very powerful tool, even in Windows. It allows you
to use a single (available) drive letter to specify a path which could be any
number of folders deep, e.g. "c:\folder1\folder2\folder 3....\foldern" (it's
been tested to 10 levels). Virtual Drive Creator™ (VDC) does
exactly the same thing.
Suppose you are working on a project that requires the use of a drive letter
as a root directory, and all your files are in a Folder named "C:\Program
Files\Microsoft Visual Studio\VB98\RPN Calc", to access your files in Explorer,
or VB6 you need to traverse through the maze of folders to get there. Using VDC
I chose the letter R to represent that particular path and in any explorer type
directory tree the letter R is there showing me all of my Folders and files
I have in that Virtual Drive. I can also access that directory from a DOS
Window.
For CD users, simply copy the contents of your CD to a folder on you hard
drive, not the root. Create a virtual drive
pointing to that folder. Install the CD using the virtual drive letter. And
like magic you can run the CD from your hard drive. This work for about 70% of
the CDs we've tested, it does not work for music CDs or Data CDs.