>>This sounds useful. How does one make such a disk, which will be
>>ready to use if even the CDROM driver and whatever registry entries
>>it uses are damaged, so that one can't even get to the Windows CD?
David,
You can make a boot disk with the DOS drivers for your CDROM (and applicable
ASPI drivers if it's SCSI).
At this point you can access the Win95 CD and potentially fix problems with a
corrupted Win95 installation by selecting the install option that just
replaces corrupted/missing files.
I've used ghost to make an image of my c:\ drive and saved it on a CDR. The
*plan* is to access it in the manner mentioned above should I ever need major
data recovery from my c: drive.
SSgt Rick Mann
178th Fighter Wing
Small Computer HelpDesk
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