an incorrectly inserted cable
Members Only.
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.
No. A "system disk" is simply any disk which the computer can boot from and has an operating system installed on it. In most modern computer systems, the hard disk is normally the system disk. However most systems can also boot from a floppy disk, a cdrom, or even a USB thumb drive, providing of course that the media in question has the necessary system files on it. Many older systems did not have the ability to boot from the cdrom drive or USB drives. On these systems the only options were booting from the hard disk or floppy disk, so if the OS hadnt been installed to the hard disk yet (or it was broken) the only other option was the floppy disk.
Floppy disks use a FAT file system.
If your system has a floppy drive you can use another computer to place the needed driver on a floppy disk an then reinstall them.You could use a USB drive to transfer the drivers to the computer if no floppy drive is present.There are also several ways to connect a second computer to the faulty system so the needed drivers can be transferred and installed.
A full backup of the drive on which Windows is installed and an ASR floppy disk on which information that will help Windows use Automated System Recovery is stored
This is no longer a common feature for any modern operating system. Debian Etch and prior allowed starting a net install from a floppy disk, but the kernel is too large in recent releases for this to be possible.
The security system was installed for a reason. There is no reason that it should be bypassed. This forum is not to answer questions that may be illegal or immoral.
Bart PE is a pre-installed environment operating system utility to run a PC compatible computer so you can access files when the installed operating system is not accessible for whatever reason.
Use a Boot up CD or Boot up Floppy to format the C: Drive and then install ur Operating System. to create a boot floppy go to control panel -- > add and remove prog -- > the last tab (creat boot disk)
Under Windows, a floppy drive is always formatted using the FAT 12 file system.
From the DOS prompt, you can copy most files only to a floppy as the system won't recognize any other devices (e.g. cd-rw).