Jump to content

Boot Win2K from USB 1GB Pen drive


Boballoo

Recommended Posts

Is it possible to place Win2K on one of these new USB 1GB Pen drives and boot a computer from it? I would like to place Win2K and a couple small applications on this and carry it with me when I travel and boot up a friend's machine from it. Is this possible? How about from a USB 260 GB hard drive? (I am not sure what the difference is aside from size)

If so how would I go about doing this?

Link to comment
Share on other sites


the idea is great.. not new.. but great..

problem will be driver constelation.. whenn u install win2k on machine a, driver from tis machine will be installed... when hardware of machine b differs from machine a, you will have problems on booting it, because of no drivers..

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The specific machine you are trying to boot from has to support booting from a USB drive in BIOS. No support - no boot!

I can change this in the bios can't I? I think any machine that can run Win2K or WinXP will be able to boot from this won't it? I am not sure what you mean by "support." Where would I find out if the machine I want to boot supports booting from a USB drive? Is this stated in the BIOS?

"when hardware of machine b differs from machine a, you will have problems on booting it, because of no drivers.. "

So, as I understand it, as long as I have the drivers from machine A (mine) I can then install them on machine B (my friend's) and things will work okay? I am not sure why I would need to install drivers on machine "B" for hardware that is not connected to machine "B" but I can understand that Machine "B" might have drivers for hardware that is not connected to machine "A" In which case it would mean I need the drivers for the machine that I am booting at all times. However, Win2K almost automatically installs drivers when it finds new hardware connected so this might not be such a problem unless I run into someone with odd hardware.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

it's not that simple :)

USB boot support must be from 2 areas in this case:

:: BIOS (hence the motherboard itself),

:: USB drive itself.

BIOS of the m/b must be able to support USB boot-up. this means that the m/b must be able to detect the presence of USB drive and the ability to boot from it.

The USB drive itself must be able to support boot-up (or bootable) through using the bundled software. this support depend on whether the USB drive's controller support boot-up.

FYI, every single USB devices, i.e. pen drives, memory cards such as MMC, SD, RS-MMC, miniSD, card readers, WILL have at least 1 main controller. this controller is the 'processor' of the device that dictate the speed, data processing, etc. etc. ...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...