This pair of error messages was a design mistake:

OS/2 !! Sys01475
OS/2 !! Sys02027

That's a case of national language considerations run amok. That was the 
only pair of messages you saw on your screen when you formatted a diskette 
with OS/2, left the diskette in the primary drive, and rebooted the 
typical PC of that era (that didn't automatically try to boot from another 
device when there was a diskette in the primary drive).

A diskette's boot sector doesn't have much room, so the designers had to 
be concise. They wanted to include at least one error code, and they did. 
But then instead of some portion of the planet not understanding what 
happened, very nearly the entire planet didn't understand what happened. 
:-)

A better design would have used a global message like this:

OS/2 SYS01475: Diskette in Drive!

That's exactly the same number of characters, assuming the new line was 
one character. (If not, the colon could have been omitted.) Yes, "Diskette 
in Drive!" is technically English, but even so it would have been much 
more broadly, globally understood than mystery error codes.

Even this one would have been better:

OS/2 SYS01475 Unbootable Diskette

Or:

SYS01475: Data Diskette in Drive!

Pretty much anything with the word "Diskette" (the term IBM preferred 
instead of "Floppy") would have given users a clue. Even this:

OS/2 !! Sys01475
No Boot Diskette

- - - - - - - - - -
Timothy Sipples
I.T. Architect Executive
Digital Asset & Other Industry Solutions
IBM Z & LinuxONE
- - - - - - - - - -
E-Mail: [email protected]

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