On 1/2/13, M de Luis <gimme_the_gi...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> When I copied the Net installation iso of Fedora to my USB flash drive using
> the Fedora LiveUSB creator, I noticed that the pre-existing FAT32 filesystem
> on the thumb drive had been unaltered, and that DOS readable files for the
> live image and Network installation had been added in 4-new directories.
> Presumably some sort of boot loader, that is able to read the FAT32
> filesystem files, was added to the boot sector region of the flash drive. As
> soon as I am able to recreate this mystery boot loader's installation
> process for a FAT32 formatted IDE drive, then the problem is licked. It's no
> effort to boot the laptop from a Windows98 rescue disk using the floppy
> drive, create a temporarily bootable DOS partition for the Net installation
> files, and then given the bios' legacy USB support will allow, merely copy
> the appropriate installation directories and files from the thumb drive to
> the hard disk. Install the boot loader, and away you go.
>
> Okay, so who can tell me which bootloader is written into a thumb drive's
> boot sector, when the Fedora LiveUSB Creator tool prepares a USB flash drive
> using one of the installation iso images?

The bootloader is called SYSLINUX: http://www.syslinux.org/
IThey include DOS binaries.

Unfortunately, the copy of DOS included on the Windows 98 boot disk
does not have a USB mass storage driver (or any sort of USB driver for
that matter), though you might have some luck with this stuff:
http://www.bootdisk.com/usb.htm

That being said, the easiest solution IMHO is to plug its hard drive
into a different machine and do the install there.

--T.C.
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