Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 25th Sep 2005 12:17 UTC, submitted by Anonymous
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USB was not bootable until laptops/desktops sold in 2004 or later for the most part. This laptop is from 2002. And theres no BIOS upgrades for them, so no way to add support for it...
I think you're off by a few years. Hardware from ~2000 could boot off of USB, though the BIOS support was iffy. That changed over the next couple years, and some pre-2000 systems can boot off of USB with the right BIOS.
I have a Sony Vaio C1VFK, made around 2002-3 and I've never needed to boot it from a USB stick, but I can boot from a generic USB floppy drive, which suggests to me that you can USB-ly boot the thing.
I stuck RC3 on it by wrestling the files via zips, but it was painful, as you say.




Member since:
2005-06-29
USB was not bootable until laptops/desktops sold in 2004 or later for the most part. This laptop is from 2002. And theres no BIOS upgrades for them, so no way to add support for it...
BeOS runs fine on all Vaio's I've tried it on, it just needs to be forced onto those without built-in CD-ROM's
You can still move an installed Zeta system, but not having another working x86 laptop worth a damn that wasn't an option - not many old laptops support 80GB 7200RPM ATA133 hard drives. I eventually had to copy all the files onto a new partition from within BeOS, then unzip all the zip'ped up packages, and create a few symlinks myself.