That usually means that it can't locate the kernel. I would manually
edit grub and change (hd0,1) or whatever the entry is for Fedora. If
you have only one drive, then don't change the first number which is
for drive, counting from zero (ordinals). The second number is for
partition again counting in ordinals. eg) If Fedora is on the third
partion of the first drive then it should read (hd0,2).

This type of error often happens when grub misnumbers the drives due
to an unusual setup, sometimes with the BIOS or cable setup being
reversed.  I have two drives on my other computer and see this error
with some distributions. It will write grub to the first drive, but
mix up hd0 and hd1 due to my BIOS settings. In my case, I change the
first number which is the drive.

Once you get into Fedora then you cna edit grub.cfg and fix the
problem permanently. Failing that you can re-install and pay extra
attention to where grub is installed.

Roy

Using Kubuntu 10.10, 64-bit
Location: Canada



On 30 January 2011 15:56, l0rd42 <[email protected]> wrote:
> I just did a fresh install of Fedora 14, and when I try to boot into
> it, it says to insert a bootable disk, then hit any key. Does anyone
> have any help?
>
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