IntelliFix app runs well'when it runs
Year 2000 fix-it packages abound for PCs, but none of them seems to work on every PC.
By John McCormick
Special to GCN
Year 2000 fix-it packages abound for PCs, but none of them seems to work on every PC.
IntelliFix 2000 from Intelliquis International Inc. is no exception, but it does have some good points.
The software runs from a floppy disk, checks the real-time clock and the BIOS chip's ability to roll over to Jan. 1, then applies six leap year tests and even installs a software fix for most PCs.
The basic suite of tests and repair utilities covers PC hardware, and looks for and checks MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows and Windows NT. The professional version adds utilities for Microsoft Office 97. A deluxe version can make hardware clock fixes.

IntelliFix 2000 also tests and attempts to fix a wide range of application files, including those from custom programs.
According to the documentation, IntelliFix 2000 fixes hardware date problems by installing a small boot-level utility program that intercepts any hardware date requests.
The program automatically corrects the date seen by your software, neatly eliminating any need for you to buy a soldering iron and anti-static wrist strap to change your BIOS or RTC.
I had mixed results with the software. But when it worked, it worked well. By sheer good luck, it worked wonderfully well on the first PC I used it on. Later tests on older PCs were disappointing, however.
On a 66-MHz Compaq Deskpro XL 566 Pentium, the tests ran fine, but the software made no attempt to install a software fix, and the test screen displayed garbage images where there should have been control buttons.
I sent an e-mail to the company's technical center questioning this and got back a response a few hours later. That was a pretty quick turnaround.
Unfortunately, the tech rep just told me that I should buy the program if I wanted to do more than test the computer.
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IntelliFix 2000 Pro Year 2000 PC testing tool
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John McCormick, a free-lance writer and computer consultant, has been working with computers since the early 1960s. E-mail him at poweruser@mail.usa.com.
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