Back in the early days of Linux, there were multiple floppy disk distributions. They made handy rescue or tinkering environments, and they packed in a surprising amount of useful stuff. But a version ...
I have a X20 IBM laptop, and was going to install Red hat on it since I knew I could copy the iso's on a fat partition and boot the boot disk kernel, also on the fat partition, through grub.
OK guys, trying to install Peanut Linux onto this old laptop, but I'm running into a problem. The laptop doesn't support bootable CD-ROM's so I have to make a boot floppy, however, the boot.img is ...