DL
June 9th 04, 07:03 PM
Jeff, thanks for replying back to my post about
performing a clean install of Windows 98. See, I was a
little unsure because when I did this with Windows Xp
last month it seemed that the fdisk utility and the
formatting were all built into the Windows Xp
installation Cd that came with my pc. Very simple and
straightforward. I have an old computer running Windows
98 and wanted to do this but noticed you had to a make
boot disc and use those utilities before running setup.
However, you mentioned that you can format a disc without
actually running fdisk. Thats why I asked because when I
tried formatting the disc without deleting the old C:
partition, its said something that installing two OS into
the same partition can cause problems. So, I deleted the
old one and I recreated it like you mentioned and
formatted it. I will make the boot through Windows
before I do this but if not I will utilize the web page
you mentioned. Also, I lost my original Windows 98
installation disc, is it okay to use his disc and use my
product key that came with mine?
Thanks, DL (I tried emailing you but it was returned
back to me)
>-----Original Message-----
>Some Windows installation CDs were bootable, most
weren't. You can get a
>utility to create a boot disk from www.bootdisk.com.
You can simply format
>the existing partition, or delete it and re-create it,
as you choose.
>There's no need to run FDISK if you are formatting
only. I always figure
>that if I am going as far as a full format, why not go
that little bit
>further and delete everything and start afresh. It only
takes a few minutes
>extra.
>--
>Jeff Richards
>MS MVP (DTS)
>"DL" > wrote in
message
...
>> Hi, I have question in regards of doing a clean install
>> of Windows 98. Do I have to make a Windows 98 boot
disc
>> inorder to boot the computer into setup. I have
>> successfully done a clean install of Windows XP by
>> changing the boot sequence in my BIOS settings to boot
>> from the CDROM to get into setup. I read on another
>> website that you can also do this with the Windows 98
>> installation disc? Is this true? Also when doing a
clean
>> install of Windows 98 and I run the fdisk and format
>> utility do I have to delete the existing partition C:
>> first and creat a new one before formatting? Any help
or
>> advice would be appreciated.
>
>
>.
>
performing a clean install of Windows 98. See, I was a
little unsure because when I did this with Windows Xp
last month it seemed that the fdisk utility and the
formatting were all built into the Windows Xp
installation Cd that came with my pc. Very simple and
straightforward. I have an old computer running Windows
98 and wanted to do this but noticed you had to a make
boot disc and use those utilities before running setup.
However, you mentioned that you can format a disc without
actually running fdisk. Thats why I asked because when I
tried formatting the disc without deleting the old C:
partition, its said something that installing two OS into
the same partition can cause problems. So, I deleted the
old one and I recreated it like you mentioned and
formatted it. I will make the boot through Windows
before I do this but if not I will utilize the web page
you mentioned. Also, I lost my original Windows 98
installation disc, is it okay to use his disc and use my
product key that came with mine?
Thanks, DL (I tried emailing you but it was returned
back to me)
>-----Original Message-----
>Some Windows installation CDs were bootable, most
weren't. You can get a
>utility to create a boot disk from www.bootdisk.com.
You can simply format
>the existing partition, or delete it and re-create it,
as you choose.
>There's no need to run FDISK if you are formatting
only. I always figure
>that if I am going as far as a full format, why not go
that little bit
>further and delete everything and start afresh. It only
takes a few minutes
>extra.
>--
>Jeff Richards
>MS MVP (DTS)
>"DL" > wrote in
message
...
>> Hi, I have question in regards of doing a clean install
>> of Windows 98. Do I have to make a Windows 98 boot
disc
>> inorder to boot the computer into setup. I have
>> successfully done a clean install of Windows XP by
>> changing the boot sequence in my BIOS settings to boot
>> from the CDROM to get into setup. I read on another
>> website that you can also do this with the Windows 98
>> installation disc? Is this true? Also when doing a
clean
>> install of Windows 98 and I run the fdisk and format
>> utility do I have to delete the existing partition C:
>> first and creat a new one before formatting? Any help
or
>> advice would be appreciated.
>
>
>.
>