Yes. you don't need a key board to boot the computer.
This was taken out of Windows XP, but is still in Windows 98 and below.
USB drive and DVD ROM
If you told the installer to use the entire hard drive, Windows will be erased. If you told it to resize the partitions on the disk, Windows should still be bootable from the GRUB boot menu. If the installer was interrupted before GRUB could be installed, Windows is probably still intact, but lacks any boot loader to launch it. Reinstall Linux to fix the problem.
The boot files are in C://Windows/system32
Boot Camp allows you to install Windows on your Mac and dual boot. Your Mac will look just like a Windows PC when you boot into the Windows partition. You will also have to install Windows Security on that partition to be safe.
Following are the boot loader features of windows 7: a) Windows Boot Manager(Bootmgr.exe) b) Windows Operating System loader c) Windows Resume Loader
Windows Boot Manager (bootmgr)File,Windows boot loader (winload.exe)File and the Boot Configuration Data (BCD) File
NTLDR is indeed a key boot file in Windows 2000 and all of the Windows operating systems since Windows NT. A machine will not boot without that file.
you will have to boot up your computer from the windows 7 DVD and repair the installation (I guess its called startup repair). OR If you have Windows XP installed on the same PC, then use Vista Boot PRO (Totally free) to restore Boot manager info to your windows 7 partition
You don't. Boot priority is specifed by the BIOS, not Windows 2000.
Windows boot manager controls how your computer will restart again. One example is to boot after going to sleep. Another example is to boot after pressing the reset button.
You can partition your hard drive and install Windows Server onto the partitioned space. You then can boot up from either Windows 7 or Windows Server.