2 Intern

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14.4K Posts

December 2nd, 2004 08:00

Sorry that's not possible as the BIOS does not support booting from USB devices.

8 Posts

December 2nd, 2004 21:00

Thought so :smileyhappy:

Would be cool a innovation though.

2 Intern

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14.4K Posts

December 3rd, 2004 08:00

the newer Dell laptops have BIOSes which supports booting from USB devices.

2.2K Posts

December 3rd, 2004 12:00

If you really need to boot to a USB CD, there might be a way to boot to DOS first and then load USB drivers, followed by loading and running the CD software. Sounds complex, but I believe DOS can be used to access USB, Firewire or a network with the proper drivers.

GM

December 9th, 2004 18:00

The idea about the DOS USB driver is indeed your best option.

I've used this DOS Usb Driver a couple of times to boot from an external Maxtor HDD. It boots from several different computers, althought I was unable to make it work for the latest Inspiron 5150 and up.

Here's the link: http://www.pocketec.net/downloads/duse_4_2.zip

Best regards,

Rick

8 Posts

December 11th, 2004 14:00

sounds good, but how would i do this if i was booting from a floppy, because i have no OS installed on the computer

2.2K Posts

December 11th, 2004 18:00

DOS, booted from the floppy, is your initial operating system. A USB driver written for DOS and a CD driver written for DOS would need to be included on the floppy. A DOS boot floppy usually includes a driver to access the CD drive, and USB drivers are available as Rick pointed out. A command from DOS would be used to access the USB port, access the CD drive, and launch the bootable CD.
 
DOS programming skills would be beneficial, although you might find a program already written to perform exactly what you need. Lots of good info here.
 
 
GM
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