Oh man, you're going to have a lot of "fun" that way.
Won't having to change the hardware setup everytime be a pain?
According to Microsoft, this is the way to do it. I'm taking this from the new help center in Windows XP, search keywords "dual-boot"; seems to me the information could also be in some readme file on the cd.
You can also read article Q306559 of the Knowledge Base, "
HOW TO: Create a Multiple-Boot System with Windows XP".
- Each OS must have its separate partition (or drive)
- The boot partition should be formatted in FAT/FAT32
- You have to install Windows 95/98 first, then Windows 2000/XP, in order that Windows 9x does not replace the boot sector and Windows 2000/XP's boot files
What that means, unfortunately, is that if you're ever forced to reinstall Windows 98 (which I do every 4 to 6 months), you'll have to reinstall Windows XP again, since the Windows 98 reinstall will have overwritten the boot sector and XP boot files which allow the system to boot XP.
Some tips:
- You don't have to install both OSes on different drives. You can install them on different partitions of the same drive. (That's what I do, even if I have 2 drives, because the second one is really slow.)
- If you don't want to have the XP partition given a letter after the CDROM drive, create all your partitions before installing Windows 98. (You only have to format the boot partition.)
- Creating an image of each partition after the installation would be a good idea, to save time for the next reinstall. Norton Ghost from Symantec will do that; note however that while it can create an image from a NTFS partition, it cannot write the image to one.
- It might be a good idea to have at least a third partition in FAT32 for sharing documents between both OSes, and for writing the partition images with Ghost.
- Favorites and email can be shared between both OSes, if you're not afraid of the Registry editor.
If you've already installed Windows 98 on one drive, then I suggest you reconnect both drives, with the one with 98 as boot drive, and reinstall Windows XP on the second drive. When booting on the Windows XP CD, the installation program will detect Windows 98, but it will allow you to install itself on another partition, in which case it will replace the boot sector on the first drive so you can dual-boot.
[ 10-28-2001: Message edited by: DrSoya ]