Greetings,
The problem has been solved. After noticing
that the resulting burned CD-RW was readable and bootable on other PCs, and
after comparing the boot blocks of both the burned and purchased CDs were very
similar, Janet (my wife) suggested that the CDROM drive (of the PC on which I
ou just looking for a way to check that the disc is 100% correct,
> or are you actually having problems booting off the burned disc? If it
> is the latter, you most likely burned it as track-at-once rather than
> disc-at-once. Which CD burning program are you using?
>
>
> On Thu, 15 Jul
e available for use on
a Windows machine, such as the way FIPS will examine a hard drive.
.
- Original Message -
From: "Tony Godshall" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Steve Kleiser" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, July 14, 2004 1:23
Greetings,
What freeware utilities are available that
could be used to check the boot sector/MBR of a Debian boot CD using a Windows
machine? After burning the CD the directory structure looks the way it should,
but I'd like to verify the correct location and content (maybe via a checksum
D]>
Sent: Monday, June 21, 2004 6:10 PM
Subject: [debian] Re: [other] Re: Trick to burning a bootable Debian CD?
> Steve Kleiser wrote:
>
> >So does that mean the official CD images are not bootable?
> >
> >
> >
> >
> No; they are bootable. But you have to
So does that mean the official CD images are not bootable?
- Original Message -
From: "Alvin Oga" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Micha Feigin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, June 19, 2004 8:53 PM
Subject: [other] Re: Trick to burning a bootable Debian CD?
>
> hi y
Greetings,
Although able to boot from a (purchased)
Debian 3.0 i386 Install #1 NON-US CD, the CD I burned using Roxio Easy CD
Creator 5 Basic and debian-30r2-i386-binary-1_NONUS.iso won't boot in the same
Pentium desktop clone. The directory structures of the two CDs appear to be
identic
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