Ron_Jeremy 0 Posted April 14, 2006 I've copied the contents of a HP Home disc to a desktop compy & shared the folder. Using the Bovistech V3 TCP/IP boot disk, I have no probs accessing the shared folder & initializing the XP setup. However, I'm repeatedly prompted that: XP requires a hard disk volume with at least 333 MB of free disk space....bla bla bla. The pc in question is a Toshiba notebook, model 2410. The hard disk is working fine, & I even tried another unit to make sure. I even fdisked/partitioned/made_active the disk in another pc, but still nada. I'm never asked where I want to install to. The first screen is simply to confirm the install files are on H:\i386 (H being the mapped "net use" drive). After I hit "enter", I'm greeted by the italics I've repeated above. What gives here? Share this post Link to post
Jerry Atrik 0 Posted April 14, 2006 could there be an "unattended" install file on the original disk which defaults the install directory? Share this post Link to post
Bendover333 0 Posted April 14, 2006 Do a FDISK /mbr then actually format the c: drive; don't just fdisk it. Share this post Link to post
Ron_Jeremy 0 Posted April 15, 2006 Had already formatted the disk. Could it be because the boot disk (floppy) is my C: drive? When the network boot disk completes loading, it leaves you at: C:\Net then all I do is add the proper syntax to successfully access the network share: C:\Net net use z: \\techrm\toshiba From there I merely go into the i386 folder & start the installation by executing winnt. Once that has happened, I'm prompted to hit "enter" to confirm the install files are at Z:\I386. It's then that I see the "your hdd ain't big enough" error I quoted in my initial post. Should I be trying: C:\Net net use C: \\techrm\toshiba instead? Share this post Link to post
Relic 0 Posted April 15, 2006 I'm sorry man, but I find it hilarious that "Ron Jeremy's" "HardDrive" isn't big enough, that just busts me up, I'm really sorry, heh heh heh Share this post Link to post
Bendover333 0 Posted April 15, 2006 I would say the problem is you are on the c: drive (from your boot up) and setup is thinking that's where it want to write the setup files and it can't. Change your boot-up disk to something like "Q:" or "R:" It should be easy. Share this post Link to post