Idkwhatnamehere wrote: Mon Jul 08, 2024 10:27 pm
Wiz57 wrote: Sun Jul 07, 2024 2:03 pm
would be to make a bootable USB drive from another Windows machine using Rufus, although unetbootin should have worked as well,
I tried rufus app on the play store It only show blinking underscore also etchdroid didn't work too and I tried unetbootin it says "this is not a bootable disk"
Play store? Are you attempting this from an Android powered tablet, or Chromebook? I haven't used either of those, only unetbootin and Rufus from
Windows. I've used both my old WinXP netbook and this newer Dell Latitude 3190 laptop with Windows 11. Both worked well enough from Windows.
In fact, I had to reconstruct everything on the old Acer Aspire One netbook with WinXP...the recovery thing from Acer wouldn't even boot, so, I used
Rufus 3.20 on my Win11 notebook, wrote the WinXP Pro iso to a thumb drive, booted with that and reformatted the HDD, then installed WinXP Pro SP3,
to replace the WinXP Home Starter SP3 that Acer had for a recovery disk...that old netbook now runs circles around what it used to without all the
Acer crap that always wanted to run at startup. Once I had WinXP back (a long story, suffice to say my experiments resulted in a botched MBR, LOL)
then I grabbed my backup of an old Slacko Windows installer, installed grub4dos and Slacko 6.3, from which I could then download a newer version of S15Pup32,
extracted to a directory (folder in Windows speak) and added the desired boot stanzas to the menu.lst that the old Slacko63.exe installed!
I also grabbed my backups of ArchPup32, and ScPup32, older versions because the kernels and zdrvs function better with my Acers WiFi. Then I
could grab my other stuff from various archives and backup sites, and now the Acer is back in service. The first step though was using my other Windows
laptop to create a bootable USB drive. Try this, and if needed I'll help you find that Windows EXE file that installs grub4dos bootloader and the old
Slacko. I don't use Slacko6.3 much, but the installer is very good for older legacy BIOS and MBR systems. There is also floating around another Windows
EXE file that installs a bootloader, called Lick, in the Puppy forums. I haven't used it, but many have. That may be another option.
But first, let's get Windows installed and booting properly!
Wiz