Sorry to provide what are likely painfully obvious instructions by now, but
I found myself wanting >>any<< information, regardless of how obvious. And, 
I'm doing this from memory, so the order of steps and some of the particulars
may be out of wack (I tend to mess with my system in the small hours of the
day when my wife and daughter are sleeping and cannot hear my profanity...
Good for my image, but bad for my recall.)

First, unzip this file to a floppy. It was compressed with PKZip and should
decompress with that under DOS or InfoZip's unzipper, under OS/2.

You are about to shutdown and reboot, alot.  So, you may want to streamline 
your bootup process by moving everything out of your startup folder, 
disabling automatic lock-up, and anything which adds delay to Warp's
booting.  You will also feed your system a lot of disks, so be patient.
(I lost count, but I'm certain I did a full install of MMOS/2 at least
3 separate times to get my driver to work)

To install this under Warp, you will next have to install MMOS/2 using
the normal first-time install options or selective install.  I suggest you
install MMOS/2 using a SoundBlaster card, as (if I remember my experience
correctly) you won't be able to add the MMOS/2 files (.wav files, controls, 
etc.) without specifying a card.  I learned this step the hard way, after  
many abortive attempts to install the Soundgalaxy (a.k.a. Aztech, Reveal SC400,
and others) directly through the Warp install routines or by specifying an
external driver during the normal MMOS/2 install.

Is MMOS/2 installed? Good.  Now, shutdown and reboot.

Now, you should have a Multimedia (MMOS/2) folder.  Use the Multimedia 
Application utility icon to launch the MMOS/2 installer.  Specify the 
proper drive as the source (a:\ or b:\, depending on your hardware).  The 
MMOS/2 Application installer should identify the file as the Soundgalaxy
driver, v 1.0. with a nice little icon, and the file size and date.  High-
light the driver and click "ok".

At some point (either while installing the driver or the MMOS/2 files) 
you will be asked two critical questions.  First, you will be invited to 
modify the  settings (IRQ, base memory address) for the card from the 
default settings.  My advice is:  >>don't<<.  Reason:  I stripped
my system to the bare necessities (no modem, scanner, network card) and
even with a "clean" IRQ map, the driver would not work with any settings
other than the default settings.  So, just go with that which is offered
you. For me, and some others reporting their experiences on the net, 
messing with the defaults is a tenuous thing at best with little hope 
of success.

A second critical question is you will be asked how many cards are installed
in your system.  (Again, I'm forgetful, but I think this happens
during the driver install under the Multimedia Application Install
program).  This is important:  this time, specify "0".  This will remove
any drivers and their hooks and settings which just >>might<< mess up your
installation.  It will seem purposeless, but do it anyway.

After you get the congratulations box (congratulating you for your 
perseverance, no doubt), shut down and reboot (I've even heard that one
should do a complete power-down (cold start)-- can't hurt, what?).  Run
the MMOS/2 Application Install program yet again. You will now reinstall
the driver you installed, but did not specify a card for.

Don't change the IRQ's this time either.  Go ahead and replace the installed
driver with the same driver on this go round when prompted.  When asked 
how many cards you have installed, enter (or accept, if offered) "1".

Feed it all the disks it requests (again).  SDARB (shutdown and reboot).
Hopefully, when your system comes up, you will be greeted with the 
Warp "orchestra hit".  If not, you may want to try all of the above, again.

I'm at a loss if this doesn't do it for you.  Let me know of your results.


Luck and Regards;

Mark Covey
covey@gloria.cord.edu
