<< I'm really confused about this. I don't see how the boot disks could be caused to fail to boot, regardless of what happened to the hard drive -- or even if the hard drive was removed from the system -- as long as the system was set to boot first from floppy. Am I missing something here? >>
I get the STOP error right after the message 'Starting Windows 2000', the screen flickers a few times, which is normal, but suddenly I get this pretty blue screen with white letters 🙁
<< Anyway, if your system can boot from the CD, you should be able to delete any partition (even farkled ones) from within the first part of the setup procedure, create a new one, and install to it. And, really, I can't see why the diskettes wouldn't also support an install. Is there something odd about the hard drive? Does it require use of the F6 option to install drivers during the setup procedure? >>
Nothing fancy, just a normal on-board IDE channel => IDE HD. The HD I own is an upgrade version, BTW, and after launching \i386\winnt.exe it asks for the Windows 2000 files, so I type D:\i386\ and press Enter. It then says that Smartdrive is missing and whether I want to continue anyway. After I press yes, I get the error that there *might* not be enough space on the HD.