On Thu, 13 Apr 2000, Sean Armstrong wrote:
> Sounds like the floppie went bad or for some reason your system is
> recognizing the format of the floppy. I had a similar experience with my
> boot floppy, all I did was umount the floppy and then remount it with no
> tags. The mount command automatically mounts it as if it were an ext2 file
> system. Supermount automatically mounts the floppy as if it were a vfat file
> system and cdroms as if they were iso9660 systems. If none of this helps
> then you may have to reformat the floppy. If that doesn't work then toss it
> to the waste can because it got damaged somehow. I recently went through a
> pile of old floppies and had to throw awya about 5 of them. Good luck.
> SA
Scott:
His system does not see the floppy drive -- it's not a filesystem problem.
-Stephen-