Roxanne Pierce wrote: > > There are several reasons to have a Win95 3.5" floppy boot (startup) disk. Greetings, I have heard about the necessity to have a boot disk with CD-ROM drivers on it, but I never had it explained to me in a way I could understand and that would work on my machine. For example "Load your DOS CD-ROM drivers on the floppy". Uh... OK, HOW? Well, I FINALLY figured it out. The reason I wanted to make this floppy is to see if I could (sort of like climbing mountains). > What a Win95 3.5" boot disk is NOT designed for is to get you back into your > real, full, graphical, Windows 95. It can't possibly, not by itself. That was my problem! I thought that since the first line displayed when booting from the floppy was "Starting Windows 95", there must be a command to exit to the GUI assuming there were no problems with drives, registry etc. I was wrong! > So, the bottom line is that 3.5" Win95 boot disks are not supposed to be able > to put you into your graphical normal Win95 setup. (Unless you design it to > allow you to access a Zip disk or LS-120 disk or CD-ROM with all those files I > mentioned before.) Booting from the floppy and typing "win" isn't supposed to > work that way. These disks are supposed to boot and put you at an A prompt. > And if you make a floppy boot disk with all the alterations I've seen > suggested that *will* allow you to boot into the normal Win95 environment, the > purpose of the diskette as an emergency "fix-it" boot disk is totally defeated. Thank you! Now I know. However, stay tuned because soon I will have another question about this subject, but I'm late for work so I'll ask it later. Cheers, Kelly