Gerald Thornberry schrieb: > How about an external CDROM drive connected to a parallel port? Micro > Solutions used to make one (called BackPack) that could connect via > USB, PCCard, and Parallel Port. Once you loaded the drivers under > Windows I'm pretty sure you could boot from it. >
Hmm, what does the windows driver has to do with the ability of the bios to boot from a device? Wasn't there, in the last century, a tool for windows to boot a linux kernel (yeah, I know this is OpenBSD) from windows, but I guess that was with win-"dos". guido > On 10/11/07, Christopher Bianchi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> Peter N. M. Hansteen ha scritto: >>> Christopher Bianchi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: >>> >>> >>>> Mmm i've tried qemu, but i wish install really OpenBSD on it. I've a >>>> pcmcia but this notebook can't boot from it. >>>> >>> As Craig pointed out, if the machine has a USB port it's likely it can >>> boot from USB floppy. >>> >>> >> really ? but in the bios i not see any voices about it...anyway i'll try.