Help! - Inaccessible boot device installing Win2000

My son has an Asus notebook with both floppy and CD as external USB drives (there are no internal removable media drives). I am trying to install Win2000 from the bootable CD in place of the Swedish WinXP that is pre-installed, but I run into a Stop 0x000007b (Inaccessible_boot_device) when Win2000 tries to start d ...

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My son has an Asus notebook with both floppy and CD as external USB drives (there are no internal removable media drives). I am trying to install Win2000 from the bootable CD in place of the Swedish WinXP that is pre-installed, but I run into a Stop 0x000007b (Inaccessible_boot_device) when Win2000 tries to start during the installation.
This looks like a missing ATA driver (Intel 82801DPM Ultra ATA Storage Controller). I have system files for the notebook on a CD and have also downloaded from Intel, but Win2000 installation demands special drivers on a diskette, and requires a TXTSETUP.OEM file on the diskette in order to handle the drivers.
Where do I find the correct TXTSETUP.OEM? It's not included with the Intel chipset installer.
Alternatively, does anyone have a better solution? Grateful for any help.
 
Francis Markey
Uppsala, Sweden

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It's possible the PC BIOS does not have USB support, or such support has not been enabled in the BIOS settings. I think USB is the problem, not a missing ATA driver. Access the BIOS settings (it varies amongst manufacturers, but usually you hold down the 'DEL' key as soon as you switch on - or look for the correct key to press at the bottom of the display during initial boot. When you get in to the BIOS, check all pages for USB entries and enable the one that sounds appropriate. It may even be listed in the 'First Boot Device' -- set it to USB if available.

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OP
Thanks for the reply, pip22. It turned out to be a bit more complicated than that - the BIOS has sufficient USB support (because I can boot from the installation CD in the USB CD drive), but Win2000 installation is unintelligent enough (or perhaps just old enough) to insist on trying to use its own non-existent USB CD support on the first reboot. So I could read the CD the first time round but there was no supported device to reboot from.
 
After hunting for USB-CD support that would work in DOS, I finally solved the issue by taking the hard disk out of the notebook, hooking it up to a computer with an internal CD that could be booted in Win98, copying the Win2000 installation folder to the hard disk then putting the disk back in the notebook and installing Win2000 from the hard disk. Sounds crazy, but it in fact worked painlessly.
 
Case closed.