10/1/2019

Windows 98 Bootable Disc

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Windows 98 also provides a 32-bit file allocation table (FAT) that allows you to have a single-partition disk drive larger than 2 Gbytes. Other features in Windows 98 include: Support for Universal Serial Bus (USB), which makes it easy to plug in new devices. Microsoft's Windows 98 - MSDOS Install, without floppy disk, step by step Welcome to Microsoft's Windows 98 Install step by step from MSDOS without a floppy boot disk. This will give you an idea on how to do this when and if the time arises for you to either reinstall the operating system, install for the first time or upgrade your present. Windows 98, 98se, install win98, ISO, USB install. If you wish to try this by using a Virtual Machine (e.g. Oracle Virtual Box), ensure you configure it for Windows 98, use a small amount of memory for Display VGA memory and not more than 1GB of system memory (RAM). Microsoft Windows Boot Disk 98 SE. These disks are original boot floppy disk media for use with Microsoft Windows CD-ROMs. Not all Windows 9x/ME CDs are bootable, not all CDs included boot disks, and DOS will not see a CD-ROM drive unless a driver is loaded. OEMs were expected to provide compatible CD-ROM with the boot media provided with their systems. File Info: Windows 98 System Files. This is a zip file that contains all of the system files that you will need for making a bootable USB disk. Extract all these files into a temporary folder. Then when you run the HP USB Format Utility select the directory for your bootable files. These are the ISO boot disk images available from AllBootDisks. Download the ISO image you need, and if you need assistance creating a bootable CD from this image, visit the how-to page.

Sweepstakes entry software. Windows 98SE bootable installation disk - posted in Windows 95/98/ME: Hi all does anyone know where I can download a win98se bootable iso. Bought an old machine and want to play my old games.

Windows 98 is a continuation of the Windows 95 product. The major change is an insanely heavy focus on web integration. The help system, many applications, and even the desktop are redesigned to make use of Internet Explorer. Windows 98 runs on top of the same 'MS-DOS 7.1' with FAT32 support as Windows 95 OSR2, and it includes support for USB. Windows 98 had two major releases - a First Edition and a Second Edition. It was followed up by Windows ME.

If a download does not include a boot disk, please see Microsoft Windows Boot Disks

Manual DexterityManual dexterity involves the development of hand-eye coordination and very fine motor control. Manual dexterity occupational therapy goals. Many people in certain professions, including dentists, physicians, gardeners and musicians, require and rely on manual dexterity to perform their jobs flawlessly and consistently. Imagine the level of care and precision required in certain activities, hobbies and professions that involve small, meticulous actions with your hands, such as sewing, painting and playing a musical instrument. Activities for Manual DexterityYou can improve your manual dexterity by performing activities that require repetition, focus, hand-eye coordination and a steady hand. Activities such as learning to play and practicing a musical instrument, painting or sewing, hobbies such as making miniature models, writing with your non-dominant hand or even psychomotor skills like typing can help you develop manual dexterity.

If the listed serials below do not work for a specific release, please see the Serials thread

Windows 98 Bootable Disk Iso

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Windows 98 Second Edition is an update to the original Windows 98 that includes improved modem and sound/audio card support through the Windows Driver Model, improved USB support, Wake on LAN support, FireWire DV camcorder support, and SBP-2 Mass Storage device support. Internet Explorer 4.0 was also upgraded to 5.0 and Internet Connection Sharing made its debut. DirectX 6.1 was also included with DirectSound improvements. Windows Media Player 6.2 was also shipped replacing the old classic Windows 3.x/95 'Media Player' that originated with the Windows 3.0 MMC Extensions.

Windows 98 Second Edition can be updated with the Microsoft .NET framework version 1.0, 1,1 and 2.0. The Visual C++ 2005 runtime is the last to carry Windows 98 support. The last version of Internet Explorer that can be installed on 98 SE is 6.0. Other available upgradeable components include DirectX 9.0c, Windows Installer 2.0, GDI+ redistributable, Remote Desktop Connection (XP 5.1), and Text Services Framework. The last version of Microsoft Office capable of running on Windows 98 is Office XP.

Installation instructions

Hardware requirements can be bypassed in the setup with the undocumented /nm setup switch. This will allow systems as old as the 80386 with 8MB of RAM to run Windows 98 (although this will be far from optimal)

Create Windows 98 Bootable Cd

Important: Only the OEM Full version is bootable.

Windows 98 Full Bootable Cd

Wanted: Floppy version

Windows 98 Bootable Cd

Tutorials (oldest first)‎ > ‎

117 - Install Windows 98SE/ME from an ISO file on an Easy2Boot USB drive

The instructions below will allow you to add a Windows 98 ISO file to your Easy2Boot drive and install Win98 to an internal hard disk.
It should also work for Windows ME.


YouTube Video



Introduction

If you would like to be able to re-install Windows 98 or Me onto a system that perhaps has a broken CD-ROM, then you can do so using Easy2Boot.

Requirements

Before we start however, please remember that Win98 is a very old Operating System and so is quite tricky to install on modern systems.
The 98/Me browser is very old - most websites will not display correctly in any Win98/Me browser, so internet access is extremely limited!
Check here for a list of compatible mainboards.
Please check the following requirements before you begin!
  • The target system must be able to boot from a USB drive (Flash or HDD)
  • The target system must have an IDE hard disk drive (SATA drives may not work - set the 'Legacy/IDE' setting in the BIOS setup menu if you have a SATA hard drive fitted - do not use 'AHCI')
  • Older system BIOSes may have a 137GB hard disk limit - installing onto a hard disk larger than 137GB may cause problems (also using a USB Hard Disk larger than 137GB may cause problems - E2B will warn you if this is the case) - see here for more details.
  • Your target system will need 256MB or more of memory (the ISO contents are copied to RAM) - however, systems with more than 1GB may also cause memory problems.
  • You will need a utility to delete some folders from inside the Win98SE ISO - e.g. Daemon Tools Pro or UltraISO (so you don't lose the boot sectors from the ISO).
  • Win98 may not have the correct drivers for your audio, network and graphics devices
  • Windows 98 SE ISO (you will have to obtain this yourself) - the ISO can be bootable (preferred) or non-bootable. Try here (OEM Full is bootable) or here.
  • (optional) Windows 98 SE 1.44Mb floppy .img image file (you will have to obtain this yourself) - only required if the Win98 ISO is not bootable.
If you wish to try this by using a Virtual Machine (e.g. Oracle Virtual Box), ensure you configure it for Windows 98, use a small amount of memory for Display VGA memory and not more than 1GB of system memory (RAM). Use an IDE virtual hard disk.

Prepare the USB drive

1. Make an E2B bootable USB drive from www.easy2boot.com
2. Check that you can boot the E2B USB drive on your target system - if not then you cannot proceed any further!
3. (optional) Edit the Windows 98 SE ISO file that you have obtained and leave only the files in the root (top level) and the win98 folder.
Save the ISO file. I used Daemon Tools Pro for this. UltraISO also works.
The reason that we need to delete the other folders is that the E2B copy process will fail if there are too many files.
Also, we don't need these folders to install Windows 98.
If you like, you can try the ISO without editing it first, but it may fail to load or install properly.
4. If the ISO is not bootable (check with 7Zip - Open Archive, look for a [BOOT] folder containing a Bootable_1.44M.img file) then you will need to find and download an MS-DOS floppy disk image.
If the ISO does contain a bootable 1.44Mb floppy image as [BOOT], you only need the ISO file and you do not need a separate .IMG file.
4a. If your Win98SE ISO is bootable:
Simply copy the reduced-size ISO (approx 180MB) to the E2B USB drive _ISOMAINMENU folder and rename the file to have the .ISODOS01 file extension
(optional) Create a .txt file of the same name as the Win98SE ISO containing the menu entry that you want to appear in the E2B Main menu instead of just the name of the ISODOS01 file - e.g.:
title Win98SE Install (ISO)n Choose 2 Boot from CD-ROM then 3 without CD-ROM option 2n Run FDISK to partition the HDDn Then reboot and run Format.n Change to drive B: and type Setup to install Win98

This completes the USB drive preparation if your Win98SE ISO was bootable.
4b. If your Win98SE ISO is not bootable:
Copy the reduced-size Win98SE ISO and the .IMG file to the _ISOMAINMENUWin98 folder (you will need to make a Win98 folder on the E2B USB drive)
Use Notepad to create a new file at _ISOMAINMENUInstWin98SE.mnu with the following contents (change the filenames in bold type to match your filenames):
title Win98SE Install (ISO+FD IMG)n Choose non-CDROM option 2n Run FDISK to partition the HDDn Then reboot and run Format.n Change to drive B: and type Setup
cat --length=0 %ISO% ;; set /a LEN=*0x8290 ;; echo Length of %ISO% is %LEN% bytes
# Allow for PBR sectors etc. - must be FAT16 so over 0x20000
# call the copy batch file - first parameter is either (fd0) or (fd1) - next parameter is size of virtual drive (0x100000=512MiB)
pause --wait=3 PLEASE NOTE: Contents of CD are now on drive B:
# set number of floppies seen by BIOS - must be 2 if using (fd1) instead of (fd0)
chainloader /io.sys chainloader /kernel.sys chainloader (0xff)
5. Be sure to run WinContig (RMPrepUSB - Ctrl+F2) to make all the files contiguous.
You should now have a bootable USB drive with which can install Win98SE.

Installing Windows 98SE

1. Boot from the USB E2B drive on the target system.
Select the .isodos01 file and run it.
If you see some error messages as the files are copied to memory, this is usually because the ISO contains files with long filenames - these are not required for the install process and so won't cause a problem.
Note that Win98 will make the first hard disk partition Active and MS-DOS bootable. Therefore the first internal hard disk will be modified by this process even if you install Win98 to a different hard disk or partition!
2. If you see a message to boot from the Hard Disk or CD-ROM, choose the 'Boot from CD-ROM' option. Note: After 10 seconds it may automatically try to boot from the hard drive - so watch for the menu - don't walk away!
3. When you see a message like that below, choose Option 3 to boot without CD-ROM support:



We need to format the target system's drive as FAT32.
Type FDISK and press the ENTER key and answer 'Y' to the questions about large disk support.
Now select option 5 and check that Disk 1 is the drive that you want to install Win98 onto.
If it is not then be warned that if you proceed, the Win98 Setup process may make boot loader changes to Disk 1 anyway as it will treat it as the Win98 boot drive even if you later choose to install Win98 to a different drive volume!
5. Press <ESC> to return to the main FDISK Options menu and use the menu to create a DOS Primary bootable partition on Disk 1.
When this has been created, you must reboot again from the Win98SE ISO using E2B exactly as before (repeat steps 1-4 above).
Note: FDISK may be old and may not work with large hard drives properly! In 1998, all hard disks were IDEATAPI (not SATA) and were smaller than 137GB!
You may have problems if your hard disk is larger than 137GB. FDISK may report 'weird' sizes.
6. Now we can format the new partition. Run FDISK again and choose Option 5 again - check that Drive C: is on the target drive (we don't want to format our USB drive!).
If all looks OK, quit FDISK and type
to format the drive. (on Windows ME, format.com will be in the B:Win9x folder).
7. Now we are ready to install Windows 98 to the blank, freshly formatted (FAT32) drive C:.
At the MS-DOS command prompt, type B: and press the ENTER key to switch to the B: drive.
Now type SETUP and then press the ENTER key. This starts the Windows install process.

If you get an error about a TEMP folder, type the following commands to make Setup use a folder on the B: drive as a temporary folder:
mkdir B:TEMP

Use C:Windows as the install folder.
When requested to make Startup (floppy) Disk, click Next and then Cancel.

8. The Win98 Setup process will restart several times - you can remove the E2B USB drive at this point so that it reboots directly from the internal hard disk.
If you boot from the E2B USB key (e.g. if using a VM) then just press F7 in the E2B menu to boot from the internal hard disk again.
I successfully used a Win98 key BPKBQ-?????-?????-?????-28FW3 after the first restart of a Retail Win98SE install (Google for it!).


If you find your E2B USB drive no longer boots to the E2B menu, try RMPrepUSB - Install grub4dos - MBR=Y to fix it.