T
thanatoid
Guest
Well, I installed XP on my Win98SEL computer, played with it a
little, installed a few programs, made the interface etc. as
annoying as possible (it was actually quite easy to turn off all
the idiot prompts, although it seems that getting rid of "My
Documents" may be
impossible... but I'll worry about it later, maybe), and decided
it isn't /that/ horrible.
Basically, I have found out what I wanted to know about XP.
Someday I may find out what I need to know about Linux. For now
I have decided there is no point whatsoever in keeping XP as
long as my Win98SEL machine runs as well as it does - and does
everything I need it to do. When it dies and I have to build a
new computer, I will put XP or Linux on it. I'm not going to
worry about it now.
Which brings me to the current question.
I deleted XP, and the machine still gave me the "XP or Windows"
boot menu. Needless to say, unnecessary and annoying. So I
renamed boot.ini as well as bootsect.dos (fortunately I was not
reckless enough to just delete them). Well, you know what
happened. So I booted from a floppy and brought those two files
back.
The question:
How the hell do I get rid of that boot menu, the two files in
root of C:\ and (/if/ in fact XP messed around with the MBR)
restore the MBR to normal (i.e. non-XP) operating conditions?
I believe fdisk /mbr only works correctly (i.e. doesn't REALLY
screw things up) if you have 4 or less partitions. I have 16.
So I /reinstalled/ XP and changed the boot default to 98, but
something teels me that when I restore the Acronis image of 'C'
the machine will not boot. And I will need to do that soon, I've
been messing about way too much.
AFA my 95b with new AMD K-6 and 192 MB of RAM everything seems
fine. I still have the SiSoft Sandra fast memory write error but
everything runs well. I have the CPU at 66 x 6 (2), ie 413MHZ,
IIRC.
Thanks.
t.
--
[from a recent mental conversation]
thanatoid:
So why did you decide you wanted broadband after all your
endless babbling about how no one except DVD pirates really
needs it?
thanatoid:
My ISP is offering it for less than I am paying for dial-up now
AND the offer includes some other very attractive rate
reductions in the basic phone service charges. And I decided I
want to read my e-mail faster
(to be continued)
little, installed a few programs, made the interface etc. as
annoying as possible (it was actually quite easy to turn off all
the idiot prompts, although it seems that getting rid of "My
Documents" may be
impossible... but I'll worry about it later, maybe), and decided
it isn't /that/ horrible.
Basically, I have found out what I wanted to know about XP.
Someday I may find out what I need to know about Linux. For now
I have decided there is no point whatsoever in keeping XP as
long as my Win98SEL machine runs as well as it does - and does
everything I need it to do. When it dies and I have to build a
new computer, I will put XP or Linux on it. I'm not going to
worry about it now.
Which brings me to the current question.
I deleted XP, and the machine still gave me the "XP or Windows"
boot menu. Needless to say, unnecessary and annoying. So I
renamed boot.ini as well as bootsect.dos (fortunately I was not
reckless enough to just delete them). Well, you know what
happened. So I booted from a floppy and brought those two files
back.
The question:
How the hell do I get rid of that boot menu, the two files in
root of C:\ and (/if/ in fact XP messed around with the MBR)
restore the MBR to normal (i.e. non-XP) operating conditions?
I believe fdisk /mbr only works correctly (i.e. doesn't REALLY
screw things up) if you have 4 or less partitions. I have 16.
So I /reinstalled/ XP and changed the boot default to 98, but
something teels me that when I restore the Acronis image of 'C'
the machine will not boot. And I will need to do that soon, I've
been messing about way too much.
AFA my 95b with new AMD K-6 and 192 MB of RAM everything seems
fine. I still have the SiSoft Sandra fast memory write error but
everything runs well. I have the CPU at 66 x 6 (2), ie 413MHZ,
IIRC.
Thanks.
t.
--
[from a recent mental conversation]
thanatoid:
So why did you decide you wanted broadband after all your
endless babbling about how no one except DVD pirates really
needs it?
thanatoid:
My ISP is offering it for less than I am paying for dial-up now
AND the offer includes some other very attractive rate
reductions in the basic phone service charges. And I decided I
want to read my e-mail faster
(to be continued)