Significantly reworked, the product line, codenamed "Smirnoff", became Personal NetWare 1.0 (PNW) in 1994. The
ODI/VLM 16-bit DOS client portion of the drivers now supported individually loadable
Virtual Loadable Modules (VLMs) for an improved flexibility and customizability, whereas the server portion could utilize Novell's
DOS Protected Mode Services (DPMS), if loaded, to reduce its
conventional memory footprint and run in
extended memory and
protected mode. The NetWare Lite disk cache NLCACHE had been reworked into
NWCACHE, which was easier to set up and could utilize DPMS as well, thereby reducing the DOS
memory footprint and significantly speeding up disk performance. Personal NetWare came bundled with the network-enabled game
NetWars 2.06. A Japanese version of Personal NetWare 1.0 named "Personal NetWare J 1.0" existed for four platforms (
DOS/V,
Fujitsu FM-R,
NEC PC-98/
Epson PC and
Toshiba J-3100) and was supported up to 1995. Updates were distributed by Novell as P10J0?.EXE (with ? replaced by 1 - 5), PNDOSV2.EXE, PNDOSV1.LZH. The Personal NetWare 1.0 product saw five maintenance upgrades for the Western issues and two for the Japanese versions as well as various comprehensive updates to the corresponding VLM client driver suite (1.0, 1.1, 1.20, 1.21) as part of the Novell Client Kit for DOS & Windows up to November 1996 in the Western world and up to April 1997 in Japan. They added many new
MLID (
Media Link Interface Driver) drivers, including drivers for
SLIP and
PPP, as well as extra
codepages and languages. A full version of Personal NetWare (save the interactive tutorials) also came bundled with
Novell DOS 7 in 1994 at a price similar to that of the stand-alone version of Personal NetWare. Portions of Personal NetWare were incorporated into Novell's
LAN Workplace for DOS and
NetWare Mobile for DOS products, and as such compatible
TCP/IP drivers became available for the system as well. Later, Personal NetWare was bundled with full versions of
Caldera OpenDOS 7.01,
DR-DOS 7.02 and
7.03 between 1997 and 1999; however, these bundles were delivered with the same Personal NetWare files shipping with Novell DOS 7, not the upgraded files, which had been made available for download by Novell since 1994. The ODI/VLM client stack with TCP/IP drivers also found its way into the
DR-WebSpyder distribution in 1997. When Novell in 1996 introduced its
ODI32/
NIOS 32-bit DOS/Windows client (
Client 32), it used
NetWare Loadable Modules (NLMs) instead of VLM modules. While the NIOS client could reduce the conventional memory footprint down to 2 to 5 KB in total, the lack of something like a "PNW.NLM" module (in analogy to the VLM client's PNW.VLM) made it impossible to use the new client in conjunction with a Personal NetWare server. ==NetWare clients for DOS==