Stage 1. It's a very VERY small program less than 500 bytes in size (Due to the limitations in the BIOS standard which forces MBRs to be almost unusably small by today's standards.) whose sole purpose is to load Stage 1.5 and, later, Stage 2 into memory and execute them, which will of course in turn load and run either a kernel or another bootloader.
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Master recording
The master boot program, and the partition table.
make a new master of (a recording), typically in order to improve the sound quality Basically the record is tidied up, the hi's and lows are brought down to the perfect level.
no limit
The master boot record is always located at cylinder 0, head 0, and sector 1, the first sector on the disk.
master boot record
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What is done immediately after the bootstrap finds the operating system boot record? The BIOS reads the boot record into memory, and then passes control to it. The boot record looks on the hard disk for the kernel, or a loader program (depending upon the design of the operating system). If it can't find it, it prints an error message and then hangs, otherwise the kernel or loader is read into memory, and control is passed to it. The operating system then begins its initialisation process.
The first sector on the Hard Drive
fdisk /mbr
FAT12, FAT16, or FAT32