SUSE supports a FTP install, if you happen to have a broadband Internet connection. I used that once to install SUSE on a laptop without a CDROM drive.
--- crash 3m [email protected] wrote:
There are adapters that will let you put a laptop hard drive into a regular system. You can pick them up at microcenter for $6 or something. Depending on the distro your wanting to install, you may be able to boot from floppy and do a network install as well.
On Mon, 14 Mar 2005 15:10:13 -0600, Christopher Kanaan [email protected] wrote:
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I recently acquired an old IBM Thinkpad (550MHz
Celeron) with a broken cd-rom
drive. I would like to remove windows and put
linux on there. I went through
the bios menu's and found that it only boots from
FLOPPY, CDROM, or HARD DRIVE.
It does have USB and a 10/100 cardbus ethernet. I
guess I was wondering if
anyone had any creative ideas on how to get linux
on this beast or if anyone had
and external (usb) floppy disk drive or an
external cd-rom that they could bring
to the meeting on tuesday night.
thanks, chris
And I always thought: the very simplest words Must be enough. When I say what things are like Everyone's heart must be torn to shreds. That you'll go down if you don't stand up for yourself Surely you see that.
-- Bertolt Brecht
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On Thursday 24 March 2005 07:31 pm, Leo Mauler wrote:
SUSE supports a FTP install ...
Most distros with installers do - don't know how Debian is doing with it's installer. The only tricky bit is getting the right drivers for your NIC to load - I failed to get Mandrake's installer going on my Winbook with either of the PCMCIA cards I have.