said: 
>>If there was USB support to boot from a USB disk or CD-ROM, why would the 
>>care if the data was on a stick, a phone, or Peter Skye (USB version, of 
>>course!) 
>BIOSs don't care.  They just execute code. 
That's what I thought. 
>What you are asking is the 
>same as asking why the OS/2 USB drivers don't support every existing USB 
>device. 
I didn't think that I was. The OS/2 MSD USB drivers seem to support most 
of these kinds of devices.  I suspect that most of them follow a standard. 
>Don't forget to write a STICKFS.IFS while you are at it. 
I can squeeze out a half hour today to put it together.  What should it 
do? 
>Now let me see you boot this track from the hard drive. 
I wouldn't have expected it to do that without any way to tell it where to 
find it.  I was hoping that it would copy the structure to the directory.  
But that appears not to be the case. 
>You probably told RSJ to make a bootable CD when you wrote to the stick. 
> I suspect you neglected to do this, or couldn't do this, when you told 
>RSJ to write to the hard drive.  
I told it exactly the same thing.  I pressed the same button that seems to 
copy it to the media, though with the CD, I had to "finalize" it. 
>It appears that RSJ is smart enough to not 
>even try to write a bootable image to a mounted volume.  This is 
>probably a good thing for the rest of the data on the volume. 
Unless I told it only to write a bootable image to a specific directory on 
the volume, which is what I thought it would do. 
>Next time you create a bootable CD from an ISO 
>image, try to find a file named track01.trk on the CD. 
I won't find it - I'll find what I expected to find in that hard drive 
directory. 
--  
----------------------------------------------------------- 
"Mark Abramowitz" 
Community Environmental Services 
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