That's odd, because I have Windows NT 4.0, Windows 98, Windows 98 SE, and
Windows 2000 Professional CDs that all boot.  I just checked each one of
them.  However, except for the Windows 2000, they are all copies of the
originals and I don't have the originals anymore.  The only non-bootable CD
I have is an original Windows 95 that appears to have been shipped with a
PC.

I must reside on that plane of existance where all Windows CDs boot.

Mike Bresnahan
----- Original Message -----
From: "Carl Wilhelm Soderstrom" <chrome at real-time.com>
To: <tclug-list at lists.real-time.com>
Sent: Friday, December 22, 2000 2:23 PM
Subject: Re: [TCLUG] how anti-piracy measures make piracy more likely.


> > I'm confused, as far as I know, all of my Windows install CDs are
> > bootable.  How else would you install on a machine with no OS?
>
> win98 SE was the first version that I ever saw with a bootable CD.
> personally, I have no idea how they intend for you to get win95 on a
> machine, since I've never actually seen a win95 boot floppy (except for
the
> all-floppy version of win95a, which is long dead). such things are
> mentioned, but never seen, and I never saw a README file or the like, on
the
> CD itself.
> even winNT isn't bootable; but at least I have seen boot floppies with
that
> CD.
>
> I always just kept a custom DOS utilities floppy around, for doing
installs,
> rescues, reformats, etc.
>
> Carl Soderstrom.
> --
> Network Engineer
> Real-Time Enterprises
> (952) 943-8700
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