On Thu, Apr 11, 2002 at 10:22:56AM -0400, Scott Henderson wrote: > I've acquired a Toshiba Satellite Pro 430CDT laptop and > would like to install Linux on it... but it isn't > capable of booting to a CD, and the CD and floppy > drives fit into the same, single bay. So I can use one > or the other, not both (don't have a connector cable). > How can I 1) create a install disk to begin an > install, and 2) swap out to the CD and have it > recognized to run the install? Or am I going at this > wrong? How can I install to such a machine? Depends on the distro you're trying to install. If you've a network card, that's even better -- network installs tend to work rather well now in recent distro versions. If you're running RedHat, get to a DOS prompt with the CD in the CD drive, and (assuming the CD is drive D:) do this: C:\> d: D:\> cd autoboot D:\AUTOBOOT> autoboot I might be a bit fuzzy about where the location of this is -- autoboot is a batch file that uses loadlin to boot off of the CD from DOS, so it should work for virtually any friendly CD drive. Don't try this from Windoze, though -- it'll crash faster than you can say "Bill Gates". =op -- Thomas "Mondoshawan" Tate mondoshawan@tank.dyndns.org http://tank.dyndns.org