I've read thru the past year of archives, hoping this got answered for some other newbie. If I missed an answer, feel free to point me to the appropriate month, rather than feeling like you need to repeat yourself. I cleared off my desktop and installed Slackware 8.1 on it over the weekend. I used 8.1 because I had those CDS on hand and it's an old, slow machine. I made two partitions, one for Linux native-83 and one for Linux-swap-82. DOS and Windows are no longer on the machine. The install suggested that because Lilo was dangerous, beginners should skip installing it -- so I did. But now I can't boot. It appears that you have to have some sort of boot loader, even if you don't have another operating system on the disk -- is this correct? I enjoyed Saqib's fine document on how to install Slackware with speakup, but it says nothing at all about lilo or booting, except how to boot the floppy you make with rawrite. The slackware install how-to has lots to say about booting, but it's for people who want to keep other operating systems on the hard disk. I didn't, because it sounded too complicated. I made boot disks, and before I installed, I assembled a collection of talking, bootable media. I've got the partimage CD, the Systemrescue CD, the original installation boot and root floppies, the boot floppy I made during the install, and the Slackware CDS; the first two can be booted. So I guess I have three questions here. First, I can boot all this media, but how do I use the Slackware I installed on my hard drive? Second, how do I get that Slackware to boot, without worrying about complicated boot managers? Third, what do all these different boot parameters mean anyway. They are: For the Partimage CD: linux speakup_synth=xxx For the System rescue CD: nokeymap speakup_synth=xxx For the slackware cd: speakup.i speakup_synth=xxx For the original install floppy: ramdisk speakup_synth=xxx and the Slackware docs say for the boot floppy you made during install to type: "mount root=/dev/hda1" (or whatever your partition is.) I understand what speakup_synth does, but what's all this variation in the start command: ramdis, mount, speak.s, speakup,i, linux, nokeymap etc. At first I thought they were all different names for the kernel you wanted loaded, but then why do the docs for Slackware telll you to boot by typing mount root=/dev/hda1? That makes no sense, because if a kernel isn't loaded yet, how can it mount anything? And where do you stick in the speakup_synth parameter in this mount command? I hope my beginner questions aren't becoming too annoying. -- Debee (Deborah Norling) Alternate Media Specialist DeAnza College Phone: 408-864-5815 <MailTo: norlingdeborah at fhda.edu>