On 03/07/15 08:29, Barry Drake wrote:
I installed 8.04 on a drive using the old hardware.  Surprisingly, 8.04
runs on the old hardware better than I had expected!  After that, I
installed DSL-N onto the same drive with perfect results.  Now, how to
change the MBR on other drives without having to install 8.04 ....  I
think I can save the first 446 bytes of the MBR to a file using dd - I
understand that this copies only the boot information, and not the
partition table, so it is portable to another disk.  Having said that, I
can't find anywhere exactly what has changed in the way in which BIOS
boot took place then compared with now.  I've just about exhausted my
efforts to find out on the internet ...  anybody know any more?  I'm
really curious.

But: my answer as to the best system for seriously old computers is
definitely DSL-N and/or Puppy.  Both seem a bit quirky at first, but
they can both be made to do almost anything commonly needed.

Just remember, my aim is to get an old 486, ideally with 5.25" drive, yellowed and covered in marks. It should look like it's really had a hard life. The aim is to say 'look, a modern desktop running even on this old thing, imagine how well it would run on your pc!' So the system being demoed is only to show an extreme case and will not end up getting installed on a user's pc, so it can be as quirky as it likes really. A Ubuntu spin would be the distro being pushed to end users, possibly mate or lubuntu.

I'm curious about this mbr issue, of course I very rarely look back in this way so I had no idea anything had changed. I do wish they would stop reinventing the wheel, it worked fine as it was, didn't it?

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