|
of Power Boot 3.05 Beta |
BlueSky Innovations has
been released the version 3.05 of Power Boot. I, @Macarlo, registered user and beta tester, received the file
(PB305.ZIP, 41,045Kb) by e-mail, attached. I' m running
fine Power Boot here and recommend it! The advantage is you not need use a primary
partition as IBM BootManager and you can boot all OS you have, from primary or logical
parttitions. Have you installed Aurora and your IBM BootManager was replaced by
Aurora BootManager and you no more boots Windows 98 partition? Easy, man! Power
Boot is the solution!
Power Boot 3.0 User's Guide
Copyright (C) 1997-99 BlueSky
Innovations LLC
All rights reserved.
NOTE : Installing this software implies that you
have read and agreed to
the license information in the file license.txt.
1. Features
Power Boot allows you to boot different Operating
Systems from different
partitions on different hard disk drives.
Features include:
- Boot Profiles : Profiles are partitions which
are hidden or visible
depending on which partition you are booting from.
For example, when you
boot NT, you might want to hide all the FAT partitions.
With Boot Profiles,
you do not have to hide the partitions manually.
Then when you want to boot
Windows 98, you may need to unhide the FAT partitions.
Again, you do not
have to do it manually.
- Hide/unhide partitions on the fly as you boot
up. There is no need to
run another program in order to hide or unhide
partitions.
- Hid a partition and forgot what it was? With
Version 3.x, a hidden
partition is now displayed between <> brackets.
- Show/ignore Partitions : Allows you to prevent
Power Boot from showing
non-bootable partitions. This helps reduce unnecessary
clutter on screen.
- Default Boot Partition : Power Boot will always
boot from this
partition even if you have previously booted from
another one.
This feature, coupled with the password option,
will effectively
prevent other people from trying to boot from what
you do not what
them to boot from.
You can also configure Power Boot to boot from
the partition that was
booted the last time. This is useful if you boot
from an extended partition
or from a partition on a hard drive other than
the first one.
- One touch option to configure your system to
update an Operating System.
- One touch option to configure your system to
install an OEM version of
an operating system e.g. Windows95 OSR2. Very often,
these OEM versions
will not install if they detect another OS on the
system.
- Give names to your partitions like 'Win95 OSR2'
or 'MSDOS 6.22' for
easy identification
- Boot from any one of 63 partitions in any drive.
This is only limited by the
ability of the OS to be booted from a drive other
than C. For example, Linux
can be booted from any drive or partition. MSDOS
must be booted from a
primary partition.
- Supports LBA mode for hard drive access in order
to launch partitions in
hard drives larger than 8GigaBytes.
- Once the operating system is loaded, Power Boot
does not occupy any memory
(Swap mode off).
- Power Boot does not occupy a partition (unlike
OS/2 Boot Manager). It does
not require you to repartition your drive for installation.
Best of all,
it does not require you to have a FAT partition,
unlike another multi-boot
program.
- Power Boot does not require any configuration.
It is INSTALL and PLAY! If you
have edited lilo.conf and then forget to run lilo
before rebooting, you will
appreciate this!
- Password : to prevent someone else from changing
the boot defaults
or to boot from another partition.
Version 3.x has a new mode : now you can select
whether you want to use the
password to prevent access to Power Boot, or to
prevent access to Power
Boot options (like the F3 options menu or other
partition-specific
capabilities). This prevents unauthorized people
from changing your settings.
- Variable timeout : the timeout delay can now
be disabled or set to up to 32
seconds.
- Quiet mode : Power Boot can now start up with
just a simple copyright
message.
- Dummies Mode not dumb enough for you? Now you
can set the dumbness
level! For the really dumb, use the arrow keys
to select the
partition and press ENTER. And Power Boot will
immediately boot from
that partition instead of presenting the partition
menu.
- DOS Swap Drive: if you choose to boot from a
partition that is not on
the first hard drive, you can select a mode whereby
this hard drive
will be logically swapped with the first one. For
example, assume
that you have C: on one drive and D: on a second
drive. Booting from
D: will swap the drives so that as far as the operating
system is
concerned, D: is now C: and C: is now D:! This
works well with MSDOS
or Win95 in safe mode. That means you can still
keep that old
MSDOS/Win3.x drive and install a new multi-giga
drive with Win95 or
some other 32-bit OS that can only live on the
first hard drive.
- Win9x Swap Drive: Power Boot 2.1 provides this
feature that allow you
to boot from Windows 95 that is on a second, third
or fourth hard
drive. This means that you can have different versions
of Windows95 on
different hard drives and boot from them.
- OS/2 boot drive letter : you can choose which
drive letter an OS/2
HPFS partition can be booted with. This overrides
the default drive
letter allocation which can change drastically
when you move hard
drives around or add partitions. With this feature,
we have
successfully booted OS/2 from the second hard drive.
For OS/2 users with maintenance partitions, now
you can set drive letters
for each bootable HPFS partition.
For example, if the main OS/2 partition is drive
C and the maintenance
partition is drive D, you can set each of them
separately. Previously, to
boot from the maintenance partition, you had to
set the OS/2 boot drive
letter to D, then reset it to C when you decide
to boot OS/2 normally.
2. Installation
2.1 Distribution files
Your copy of Power Boot should come with the following
files:
install.exe - Installation file
pboot.txt - This document
license.txt - Licensing agreement
pdisk.exe - Utility to create multiple primary
partitions
pdisk.txt - User's guide for pdisk
2.2 Installation Environment
The installation program is call INSTALL.EXE. It
must be run in MSDOS mode. To
enter MSDOS mode if you use Windows 95, press F8
when you see 'Starting
Windows 95..' or boot from the Windows95 Startup
diskette. If you are not using
MSDOS/DRDOS/PCDOS etc, you need to boot with a
DOS diskette. A good and free
alternative, if you do not have DOS, is FreeDOS
(http://www.freedos.org).
There is no need to install a DOS/FAT partition
in order to install Power Boot.
Power Boot does not need a DOS/FAT partition to
work.
2.3 Before you install
Power Boot installs in the Master Boot Record (MBR)
of your hard disk. Every
hard disk has a partition sector. Following this,
are a number of free
sectors. Power Boot installs itself at this location.
Power Boot needs a total of 33 sectors for installation.
You will therefore
need a hard disk with a geometry of at least 33
sectors per track. This is
usually marked down on some hard disks as the "spt"
value.
Other programs also use this the MBR. This includes
hard disk translation
drivers like EZ-Drive or Disk Manager, boot utilities
like Power Boot and
System Commander and a number of computer virus.
Before you install Power Boot, run a virus scan
to make sure that you do not
have a virus sitting in your MBR.
In addition, check if you have one or more of the
above programs like EZ-Drive
or System Commander.
Power Boot is compatible with Disk Manager and
with other software from
BlueSky Innovations LLC. However, it is not compatible
with EZ-Drive or System
Commander.
If you use EZ-Drive, please let us know (email
: support@bluskyinnovations.com)
and we will rush you a free copy of Power BIOS
Lite, which works just as
well.
If you are using Power BIOS Lite with Power Boot,
remember to install Power
BIOS Lite first, followed by Power Boot.
One final pre-installation preparation is to back
up all your important files.
While the installation program has been in use
since 1996 and is very safe,
you should still be careful.
2.4 Installing Power Boot
2.4.1 Running install.exe
When you are in the correct environment, run the
install.exe program.
You should get a screen that looks like this:
Power Boot Installation Program V2.0
Copyright (C) 1997-98 Bluesky Innovations, All
Rights Reserved
ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
Power Boot Install Menu ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
Install Power Boot
Uninstall Power Boot
Create Rescue Diskette
Exit Installation
Up/down arrows & ENTER to select, ESC to quit
ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
HELP ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
Install Power Boot into Drive C.
Power Boot allows you to boot between different
Operating Systems on your
PC.
Up/down arrows & ENTER to select, ESC to quit
You can use the up/down cursor keys to move the
cursor up and down. When you
want to select an option, press ENTER. To quit,
either press the ESC key or select the "Exit Installation" option.
Notice that the bottom half of the screen provides
some help text.
2.4.2 Install Power Boot
"Install Power Boot" first saves the
critical information in your
Drive C before installing Power Boot. This is so
that should the installation
go wrong (very unlikely), you will still be able
to restore the state of your
hard disk. The partition information is stored
in a file called PBOOT.BIN.
This file should be stored in a diskette with a
copy of INSTALL.EXE.
If a copy of PBOOT.BIN already exists, you will
be prompted if you would like
to overwrite this file.
Then the Power Boot program will be written into
the MBR of your hard disk. You
will need to reboot to actually run Power Boot.
2.4.3 Uninstall Power Boot
"Uninstall Power Boot" restores the partition
information previously
saved in PBOOT.BIN and removes Power Boot from
your hard disk.
If, for some reason, you have lost the pboot.bin
file, the install.exe program
will allow you to uninstall using a generic Master
Boot Record (MBR) instead
of the original one.
If you do not trust the generic MBR provided by
the install.exe program,
you can still uninstall in the following manner:
a. Boot from a DOS diskette or exit into MSDOS
mode.
b. At the command prompt, type:
fdisk /mbr
This method uses the undocumented fdisk option
which writes a generic MBR into
your hard drive.
2.4.4 Create Rescue Diskette
"Create Rescue Diskette" allows you to
install Power Boot into a diskette.
This is useful if a virus program destroys Power
Boot installation. Installing
Windows 95/98 after Power Boot has been installed
will also overwrite
Power Boot.
3. Using Power Boot
3.1 When you start
To start up Power Boot, you must boot from your
hard disk. Some BIOSes allow
you to set the boot sequence such that you can
only boot from Drive C. This
is ideal for Power Boot. If you need to boot from
Drive A, you would let
Power Boot start first, and then select to boot
from Drive A.
In this way, you avoid booting from Drive A accidentally,
which is a primary
means of catching boot sector virus programs.
The following description applies when you have
not enabled Quiet Mode.
When Power Boot boots up, you will see the main
screen. The copyright message
is on the top. The bottom line contain help information.
Power Boot will enumerate all the partitions in
your hard disk and display
them in the center portion of your screen. If you
have more than 13 partitions,
there will be more than one page of screen information.
Initially, there is a timeout of 10 seconds. This
timeout value can be changed
(see Section 4).
At the end of 10 seconds, the system will boot
from the default partition.
Initially, this will be the active partition in
the first hard drive. If you
boot from another partition, that partition will
become the default one. This
will apply even for partitions which are not in
the first hard drive or
those in extended partitions.
At this stage, five keys are valid : Up/Down arrow,
ENTER, SPACE, F1, F2 and
F3.
Pressing any of these keys will stop the timeout
countdown. Pressing any
other key will skip the timeout and boot the PC
from the default boot
partition.
Pressing F1 will display a help panel indicating
the keys which are valid.
Pressing F2 will toggle the display between dummies
and expert mode. Dummies
mode shows less information than expert mode and
prevents information overload!
The default mode is dummies mode. This mode will
show the drive, partition name
and partition size. Expert mode will show if a
partition is active i.e.
bootable, drive, what type of partition, partition
name and partition size.
Type of partition will either be primary partition
or logical drive. Note that
some operating systems like Linux or OS/2 can be
booted from logical drives.
If you have not yet named your partitions, the
partition name used will be the
system ID found in the partition table and you
will see labels like DOS/FAT16,
Win95/FAT32 or Win95/FAT32/LBA etc.
If you think that such labels are confusing, you
will appreciate the ability
to name the partitions.
Pressing F3 will provide you a list of options.
See Section 4 for a
description.
3.2 Partition Operations
Navigation in the main Power Boot screen is achieved
by the Up/Down arrow
keys.
In the "Very Dumb" mode, ENTER or SPACE
will immediately boot the
partition selected.
In the "Just Dumb" Dummies mode or Expert
Mode, the ENTER or SPACE keys
are to select the partition you want to work on.
Once a partition is
selected, you will see a mini-menu with options.
There several options when a partition is selected:
a. Boot Partition/Drive
b. Hide Partition
c. Unhide Partition
d. Ignore Partition
e. Show All Partitions
f. Install OS Upgrade
g. Install OEM OS
h. Rename Partition
i. Set As Default Boot
j. Set Boot Profile
k. Clear Boot Profile
l. Set OS/2 Drive Letter
Depending on the type of partition selected, not
all the options may
be available.
Again, navigation is achieved by the Up/Down arrow
keys and ENTER is to
select the option.
Once an option is selected, the hard disk is updated
and the updated
partition's information is shown on screen. None
of the operations performed
can destroy data on the hard disks as you can always
undo them (albeit
manually).
3.2.1 Boot Partition/Drive
Booting from a partition will unhide it and make
it active.
3.2.2 Hide/Unhide Partition
Only DOS/HPFS/NTFS/Win9x partitions can be hidden.
The method of hiding
partitions follows that of the OS/2 Boot Manager/FDISK
programs.
When a partition is hidden, its name will be shown
between <> brackets.
3.2.3 Ignore Partition
If a partition is not bootable, you can ask Power
Boot to ignore it.
In this way, the partition is not shown on the
main Power Boot screen to
confuse other users.
3.2.4 Show All Partitions
This is the opposite of "Ignore Partition".
Power Boot will show all the
partitions it finds.
3.2.5 Install OS Upgrade
Upgrading an operating system option will make
the partition active.
3.2.6 Install OEM OS
This option will make the partition active and
HIDE all other partitions.
This is useful for installing OEM versions of Windows
95. This is because OEM
versions of Windows95 will NOT install if they
detect an operating system
already installed in another partition. By hiding
all the other partitions, we
prevent the Windows95 setup program from finding
out what is in these other
partitions.
3.2.7 Rename Partition
This option allows you to attribute up to 10 characters
to a partition. This
is in order to help you easily identify partitions.
For example, you may have
two different versions of MSDOS, one in German,
the other in English. You can
name on MSDOS-D (for Deutsch) and the other MSDOS-E.
3.2.8 Set As Default Boot
This option sets the current partition as the default
partition to boot from.
This feature must be enabled with the Default Boot
Mode in the F3 Options
Menu (section 4). Power Boot's default action is
to boot from the last
partition that was booted from.
3.2.9 Set Boot Profile
This feature allows you to specify which partitions
should be hidden or
unhidden when a given partition is booted from.
This feature must be enabled
with the Boot Profiles entry in the F3 Options
Menu (section 4).
The example given in the introduction is when you
want to boot NT, you want to
hide your FAT partitions. Then when you boot from
Windows 98, you want to
unhide your FAT partitions. Rather than doing it
manually, hiding or unhiding
one partition at a time, Power Boot will do it
for you.
In our example, you first set the profile to boot
NT. First, you use the F3
Options Menu to enable Boot Profiles.
Then you manually hide all the FAT partitions using
the "Hide Partition"
option. Move the cursor to the NT boot partition
and press ENTER. Select
"Set Boot Profile" and press ENTER. Voila,
you have set the boot profile for
booting NT. Now, whenever you boot NT, the FAT
partitions will be hidden.
To set the Windows 98 boot profile, manually unhide
all the FAT partitions.
You might also want to hide the NTFS partitions.
Then move the cursor to the
Windows 98 boot partition, press ENTER. Select
"Set Boot Profile" and press
ENTER. And you have just set the boot profile for
booting Windows 98. Now,
whenever you boot Windows 98, the FAT partitions
will be unhidden.
3.2.10 Clear Boot Profile
This is the opposite of "Set Boot Profile".
You clear the boot profile
information of the selected partition.
In the above example, clearing the boot profile
of the Windows 98 partition
will mean that when you boot Windows 98, only the
Windows 98 partition will
be unhidden. The other FAT partitions will remain
hidden, if you had
previously booted from NT.
3.2.11 Set OS/2 Drive Letter
If you are booting OS/2 from the current partition,
this option allows you to
set the drive letter of the partition.
Previously, you could only set a single OS/2 boot
drive letter regardless
of how many bootable OS/2 partitions you have.
Now, the drive letter is
assigned individually to each partition.
This feature must be enabled with the OS/2 Boot
Drive option in the F3 Options
Menu. In addition, the partition selected must
be an HPFS-type partition.
To use this option, enable it in the F3 Options
Menu (section 4) and then
select this option. You will see a box with:
OS/2 Boot Drive Letter : NONE
Pressing SPACE will step you through all possible
drive letters : from C to
Z and back to NONE again.
Pressing ENTER will save the drive letter.
Pressing ESC will abandon the changes.
4. Power Boot F3 Options Menu
This is a set of options which determines how Power
Boot functions at a
global, rather than at the partition level.
Press the F3 key to access these options
The options are :
- Quiet Mode
- Timeout
- Set Password
- Password Mode
- OS/2 Boot Drive
- DOS Drive Swap
- Win9x Drive Swap
- Default Boot Mode
- Boot Profiles
- Dumbness Level
Use the up/down arrow keys to move the cursor,
ENTER to select
and ESC to quit.
4.1 Quiet Mode
4.1.1 Setting Quiet Mode
When you press ENTER for Quiet Mode, you will see
a box with:
Quiet Mode Off
This is the initial state. Press SPACE and the
box will change to:
Quiet Mode On
Continue pressing SPACE to toggle Quiet Mode on
or off. Press ESC if you
want to abandon the changes or ENTER to keep them.
4.1.2 How Quiet Mode works
Once you have enabled Quiet Mode, the next time
Power Boot starts, you
will not see the blue Power Boot partition selection
screen.
Instead, you will see a dark screen with the Power
Boot copyright message.
If you do not do anything, the normal timeout will
occur and the default
partition will be booted.
Pressing ESC will short circuit the normal timeout
and boot the default
partition immediately.
Pressing SPACE will start the Power Boot partition
selection screen with
a list of all potentially bootable partitions as
described in Section 3.
If password is enabled, Quiet Mode will be enabled
by default and pressing
SPACE will prompt you for the password.
4.2 Timeout
Timeout is not longer fixed at 10 seconds but can
vary from none to
32 seconds.
When you press ENTER for Timeout selection, you
will see a box with:
Timeout(in seconds) : 10
Pressing SPACE will step through the possible timeout
values (in ascending
order). Pressing ESC will abandon the selection
and pressing ENTER will
save the timeout value selected.
4.3 Password
4.3.1 Creating a Password
When you press ENTER for password selection, you
will see a box with:
Enter password:
Passwords can be up to 6 characters in length and
are limited to letters and
numbers (no symbols). Uppercase (capitals) and
lowercase letters are the same.
Once you have entered the password, press ENTER
to save it or ESC to abandon.
Note: Password encoding is relatively simple. Therefore
if a high level of
security is really required, other means must be
used.
4.3.2 Removing a Password
To remove a password, you must be able to go into
the Power Boot
partition selection screen, press F3, choose the
Password option. Then
when prompted to enter a new password, just press
ENTER. This will disable
the password.
4.4 Password Mode
This allows you to select how password works :
whether you want the
password to prevent access to Power Boot ("Prevent
Access"), or to prevent
anyone from changing the Power Boot configuration
("Options Protect").
The default mode is "Prevent Access".
4.4.1 Booting with Password Enabled in "Prevent
Access" Mode
When a password is enabled and the Password Mode
is "Prevent Access", Quiet
Mode is enabled.
When you press SPACE at the Power Boot copyright
message, you will be prompted
for the password.
Entering a wrong password will prompt you again
for the password. This will
occur until you enter the correct password or you
reboot the computer.
Entering the correct password will start up the
Power Boot partition selection
screen.
4.4.2 Options Protect
If Options Protect is selected, pressing F3 or
trying to select any of the
partition options described in Section 3 will result
in a prompt for the
password.
The only option that will not require a password
is the Boot Partition/Drive
option.
4.5 OS/2 Boot Drive Letter
4.5.1 How to use this feature
AUTO means that an OS/2 logical drive will be booted
as D: and an HPFS
primary partition will be booted as C:.
If you have installed OS/2 as drive D:, you can
move the hard drive to
be the second hard drive in your system, and then
boot OS/2 as D:. This
will effectively boot OS/2 from a second hard drive.
This means that you can have one hard drive dedicated
to OS/2 and one to
MSDOS, Windows 95, NT etc.
Note that if you have several OS/2 boot partitions,
you will have to select
the OS/2 Boot Drive Letter for each partition before
you boot it.
4.5.2 Compatibility Issues
In some cases, you may still need to re-install
some applications. This is
especially so if you have previously been booting
with Boot Manager.
We have observed that if you installed OS/2 on
a logical partition with
a FAT primary partition visible (not hidden) during
the installation, then
you must ALWAYS have this primary FAT partition
visible whenever you boot
OS/2 from the logical partition.
Similarly, if all the FAT primary partitions are
hidden during the OS/2
installation, then they must remain hidden every
time you boot OS/2.
4.6 DOS Swap Drive Mode
4.6.1 Setting Swap Drive Mode
When you press ENTER for Swap Drive Mode selection,
you will see a box
with:
Drive Swap Off
This is the initial state. Press SPACE and the
box will change to:
Drive Swap On
Continue pressing SPACE to toggle Drive Swap on
or off. Press ESC if you
want to abandon the changes or ENTER to keep them.
4.6.2 How It Works
If you choose to boot from a partition that is
not on the first hard drive,
this hard drive will be logically swapped with
the first one.
For example, assume that you have C: on one drive
and D: on a second drive.
Booting from D: will swap the drives so that as
far as the operating system
is concerned, D: is now C: and C: is now D:! This
works well with MSDOS, Win95
in safe mode or any operating system that uses
the BIOS for hard drive
accesses.
The usefulness of Drive Swap Mode is that you can
now keep that old
MSDOS/Win3.x drive and install a new multi-giga
drive with Win95 or some
other 32-bit OS that can only live on the first
hard drive.
One point to note for Win3.x users is that Drive
Swap Mode will not work with
32-bit disk access. Make sure you disable that
before trying to use Swap
Mode.
If Drive Swap Mode is on and you boot from a partition
that is not on the
first hard drive, the Drive Swap code will be loaded
into memory and that
will occupy 1KByte of conventional memory.
NOTE : Drive Swap Mode, if enabled, will always
be activated whenever you boot
from a hard drive other than the first one.
4.7 Win9x Drive Swap Mode
4.7.1 Setting Win9x Drive Swap Mode
Beginning from Power Boot Version 2.15, Win9x Drive
Swap will be
automatically enabled if you try booting a Windows
95/98 partition from any
hard drive other than the first one.
Win9x Drive Swap mode allows you to select if you
want Power Boot to
automagically hide the FAT primary partitions of
preceding drives when
you boot Win9x from a hard drive. For example,
to boot Win95 from your
second hard disk, you will need to hide the primary
FAT partitions on your
first hard disk. Instead of doing this manually,
Power Boot can do it
for you. Logical drives on your first hard disk
will not be hidden and can
be accessed.
This partition hiding is necessary because in most
cases, you will have
installed Windows 95 as Drive C. The first visible
FAT partition will be
labeled as Drive C: and you want this partition
to be the want you are
booting from.
4.7.2 How Win9x Drive Swap Works
Win9x Drive Swap will tell the Windows 95 boot
up code that it is not booting
from the first hard drive.
In order for this to work correctly, you will have
to hide all FAT16/FAT32
primary partitions in the hard drive before the
one you are booting from.
Note that you do not have to hide any logical drives
on the first hard drive.
In this way, you can put your data on the logical
drives, and share them
between the Operating System residing of the first
hard drive and the new
Operating System on the second hard drive.
Note : Win9x Drive Swap will not be activated when
DOS Swap is enabled.
4.7.3 Installing Win9x on a Second/Third/... Hard
Drive
Method A:
To install Windows 95 on a second hard drive, you
should connected it as the
first one. Install Windows 95 as drive C: and then
re-connect the drive to
its final position (as the second, third, fourth
etc hard drive).
This is our recommended method of installation.
Method B:
Alternatively, connect the target drive normally.
Partition it using
Win95's FDISK or our PDISK. Format the partition
making it bootable by
using FORMAT x: /S (where x is the drive letter
of the target drive). Copy
over the necessary config.sys with the CDROM driver
and MSCDEX.EXE.
Reboot the PC. When Power Boot starts up, enable
BIOS Drive Swap.
Let the PC boot to the target drive.
Now, install Win9x (Win95 or Win98). In this case,
you will not have to
re-install Power Boot after the Win9x installation.
Let Win9x finish its installation until you see
the final Win9x user interface
screen with all the icons.
Now, shutdown the PC and restart it. When Power
Boot starts up, disable
DOS Drive Swap and choose 'Hide Partitions' for
Win95 Drive Swap Mode.
Select the target drive to boot from. Now you will
boot into the target
drive.
Voila! You have just installed Win9x into a another
hard drive.
The FAT primary partitions on the first drive are
hidden. When you next
select to boot from a primary partition on the
first drive, the partition
will be unhidden automatically.
4.8 Default Boot Mode
When Power Boot times out, it can either boot the
last partition that was
booted from, or it can boot from a default partition
that the user has
pre-selected.
This option determines which mode Power Boot uses.
The modes are "Use Last Boot" for booting
from the last partition, and
"User Default" for user pre-selected
default boot partition.
4.9 Boot Profiles
This allows you to enable the boot profiles feature.
By default, boot
profiles is disabled.
4.10 Dumbness Level
Two options are available for Dummies Mode : Just
Dumb (default) or Very Dumb.
Just Dumb shows a more uncluttered Power Boot screen
but otherwise provides
all the features of Power Boot.
Very Dumb shows the same uncluttered screen but
when you move the cursor to
a partition and press ENTER, Power Boot will immediately
attempt to boot
from that partition. You do not have to press ENTER
twice (once to get
the partition menu and the second time to choose
the Boot Partition/Drive
option) in order to boot a partition.
By default, Power Boot uses the Just Dumb mode.
This means that the
ENTER or SPACE keys will invoke the partition menu.
5. Pointers
Here are some hints for using Power Boot. If you
have found other tricks or
important points to note, please do not hesitate
to let us know.
5.1 Window 95/98 Installation
Windows 95/98 installation will over-write the
master boot record of drive C.
If Power Boot is installed in drive C, you will
need to reinstall Power Boot.
5.2 Linux Users
If you are using Power Boot with Linux, don't forget
to install LILO in the
boot sector of the partition from which you want
to boot Linux.
We know that the Debian distribution automatically
installs LILO in the boot
sector so that you can simply install Power Boot
and launch Linux or another
OS in another partition.
5.3 Using Partition Magic or Partition-It
Once you have used Partition Magic or Partition-It
to create new partitions or
resize old ones, your partition tables would have
changed.
DO NOT, in ANY circumstances attempt to remove
Power Boot with INSTALL.EXE.
Doing so will reload the OLD partition tables.
In order to remove Power Boot, in this case, go
to MSDOS mode and run
FDISK /MBR. This will write a generic partition
sector into your hard disk.
Partition-It and Partition Magic will overwrite
some sectors used by Power
Boot. When you reboot, you will get a brief Bad
Checksum message.
You will need to re-install Power Boot.
5.4 Rescue Diskette
With effect from version 3.0.3, the version of
Power Boot loaded from the
rescue diskette will have full functionality.
5.5 Anti-Virus Programs
Norton Anti-Virus may report Power Boot as a virus.
We suggest using
McAfee instead, which positively tests for virus
rather than assuming that
anything that is not Microsoft is a virus.
6. Compatibility
Power Boot is resident in the Master Boot Record(MBR)
of your hard disk. It
will not work with most other MBR programs except
Ontrack Disk Manager. It will
not work with EZ-Drive.
If you are using EZ-Drive, email us at info@blueskyinnovations.com
and we
will rush you Power Bios Lite, which works like
EZ-Drive.
Power Boot is Power-Chain-enabled and will co-exist
in the MBR with other
Power-Chain software like The Z-pA, The ZppA, The
ZapA, SMART Pro, Y2000 Pro
and others.
7. Problems
As in any other program, there are probably bugs
lying around.
Please send problem/bug reports, suggestions, critiques
to:
support@blueskyinnovations.com
Remember, we are here to make Power Boot easy to
use. If you do not like
something or have a better way of doing it, let
us know and we will put it
in. Many of the features here have been added because
of your feedback.
While in the beta phase, we have also received
suggestions. Rather than
delay the release of 3.0, we will include these
suggestions into
version 3.1.
8. Mailing List
Once you purchase Power Boot, you will be put on
a mailing list so that we
can send you free updates on Power Boot. Yes, it
is not a mistake : you do
NOT have to pay for the next latest and greatest
Power Boot.
This mailing list is intended for one-way communications
only : from us
to you.
If, for any reason, you wish to be removed from
the list, please email
list@blueskyinnovations.com
Disclaimer:
Bluesky Innovations specifically disclaims all
other warranties, expressed or
implied, including but not limited to implied warranties
of merchantability
and fitness of a particular purpose with respects
to defects in the diskette
(if distributed on magnetic media) or documentation,
and the program license
with respect to any particular application, use,
or purpose. In no event
should Bluesky Innovations be liable for any loss
of profit or any other
damages, including but not limited to incidental,
consequential, or other
damages.
System Commander is a trademark of V Communications
Inc
CONTACT AUTHOR
Bluesky Innovations
530 Berryessa Road #321,
San Jose, CA 95132, USA.
http://www.blueskyinnovations.com/pboot.html
@Macarlo, Inc.
@Macarlo's Shareware & Web
OS/2
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