I've yet to install Windows on an SATA-utilizing system without having to have separate drivers (usually labeled as RAID drivers) on a floppy. Extremely irritating when you launch off to the home of Mr. "my compy won't work" with a frickin' floppy drive in your pocket.

EDIT: By the way, if you want to include any drivers in your install, they have to be actual driver files (I feel stupid that I can't remember what they are; .ini or .inf, something like that). You can, however, put anything you like on the disk in its original form.
All the program does is create a folder on your hard drive with what will be your Windows CD in it, then can make an ISO out of it. There's a menu that prompts you to add anything else you want on the CD, be it text files, pictures,
Firefox, ect. I just added a folder called "drivers" with all of my favorite drivers' .exe binaries. When you're done, it takes everything in the folder and makes it an ISO.
EDIT2: That reminds me...I don't recall; can you make CD-RW/DVD-RW bootable disks? I don't think so, but I don't remember.