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Date: | Tue, 28 Aug 2001 00:30:21 -0700 |
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Your BIOS/CMOS setup (usually you can get to this by pressing some
specific key(s) at a specific point in the boot process) *may* allow
you to specify drive D as the boot device. Many modern ones do.
If yours doesn't, you may still be able to get this effect by
installing a "boot manager" on drive C which can give you a menu of
partitions to boot from. Some of these -- for instance, the one that
NT and 2000 install -- can offer partitions on other drives as
choices.
David Gillett
On 27 Aug 2001, at 15:44, Diane Kroeckel wrote:
> Dear Listers,
>
> I just installed a new second drive called D. I want to make it
> bootable. I formatted it as one partition. I have command.com, lo.sys
> and msdos.sys on that drive. I also copied my DOS directory from my C
> drive.
>
> How do I load Windows on that drive?
>
> How would I boot to that drive?
>
> Diane Kroeckel
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