According to my callculations,it's 69
Under Windows, a floppy drive is always formatted using the FAT 12 file system.
The floppy disk has nothing to do with the operating system on the hard drive. You can use a floppy disk created in Windows XP to boot a computer that has Windows 2000, Windows 98, Windows 95, Windows 3.1, Windows Vista, Windows 7, Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, etc...
There is no such thing. Windows can only read floppy disks that are in good condition and have a file system it supports, namely FAT12 or FAT16.
If your restore requires a windows disk then you cannot restore without one. Most do not require a windows CD. Most include the windows files in the manufacturer restore.
Yes. Most floppy disks all the way from the original IBM PC to the present day use the FAT file system, so a floppy created in Windows 95 (or MS-DOS, for that matter) could still be read on Windows XP or Windows Vista.
24. That's with A: and B: reserved for the floppy drives. 26 might be possible if you disable the floppy controller in the system.
Which volumes cannot be extended on a Windows Server 2003 system
I think you can only use a windowsbootable floppy disc for the system in which it was made from.
You can ask a friend - who has windows 98 - to make one for you
Linux can be booted from a floppy or a CD, although very few modern distros are actually booted or installed from floppies. Mac OS X cannot be booted or installed from a floppy; the last version of the Mac operating system that could be reasonably booted from a floppy was System 6. Mac OS X versions up to 10.4 could be installed with CDs; 10.5 and later require a DVD.
It coan be backed up to an type of removable drive (floppy, CD ROM, or jumpdrive).
FAT (also known as FAT12).