After wrestling with my friends old 386 PC for a week trying to get Pygmy Linux to install and run on it, I finially got it to run last night, for awhile anyway.... The box came with MSDOS 4.0 on it and I upgraded it to 5.0 from some 5 1/4" diskettes he supplied me with. I chose to have DOS shell to boot up as default. Then I formatted the hard drive to clear off any junk on there since I wasn't getting Pygmy Linux to load up and run during the first go around. This seemed to do the trick. I installed Pygmy Linux, the files extracted themselves onto the hard drive this time without a hich. (Last time I was getting "write errors"). I booted up Pygmy Linx and it was running smoothly (and lightning fast too!!). Then I made the mistake of trying out a modem terminal program icluded with Pygmy Linux called "minicom". Once I got in there, I couldn't figure out how to exit so I had to shut down the machine. Now when I boot back up, I get this error: "Non-system disk or disk error, replace and press any key when ready". I think the machine is somehow seeing Linux on the hard drive as a non system disk. To make matters worse, I don't have a DOS boot floppy either. I don't really know how to make one either. I am guessing since I chose to have DOS shell boot up on start up that maybe Linux is trying to boot up with it. Is this possible?I'm sure there is a proper shut down sequence for Linux, but I was planning on finding out for sure when I powered down, obviously I could not though. I know most on this list are fairly advanced in Linux/Unix and will laugh and have a good time at my expense, but I am merely a hobbyist that really doesn't know what he's doing (obviously), so I would appreciate somebody pointing out where I went wrong. (Other than not making a DOS boot disk). Pygmy Linux was created to reside peacefully on a DOS or Windows partition, but it doesn't seem to be acting this way, unless I did something wrong myself.