I've become curious about the old hardware I worked on back in the day. Hopefully someone still has these things laying around or perhaps a they have better memory than I have.
What I remember:
A Win98SE startup floppy was like gold in large part because it contained drivers you needed (or did you?) to access the optical drive. If you needed to load a replacement hard drive the Win98SE startup disk was your best friend. Seems like a Win95 disk wasn't nearly as slick.
The question is this:
Was that just a Windows thing? Would a bootable Linux CD/DVD have booted alone without the need to pre-boot with a floppy? Would the BIOS absolutely not boot from an optical without the type of drivers present on the old Win98SE startup disk?
I'm asking because like many people I started out on Windows (well actually VMS and DOS) and now I'm curious if all that fussing around was a hardware limitation or just the way Windows made you do it.
What I remember:
A Win98SE startup floppy was like gold in large part because it contained drivers you needed (or did you?) to access the optical drive. If you needed to load a replacement hard drive the Win98SE startup disk was your best friend. Seems like a Win95 disk wasn't nearly as slick.
The question is this:
Was that just a Windows thing? Would a bootable Linux CD/DVD have booted alone without the need to pre-boot with a floppy? Would the BIOS absolutely not boot from an optical without the type of drivers present on the old Win98SE startup disk?
I'm asking because like many people I started out on Windows (well actually VMS and DOS) and now I'm curious if all that fussing around was a hardware limitation or just the way Windows made you do it.