Sony PCG-SRX3S/BD 외장 디스크 부팅 : 전용 씨디롬 외 부팅불가 cs

동생의 웹서핑용으로 지인에게 25만원에 구매한 소니 바이오 PCG-SRX3S/BD.
함께 받은 외장 씨디가 작동이 되지 않는다. 일단 급한대로 XP를 세팅했지만, 많이 느리다.

한편, 이 노트북에는 4pin firewire 포트가 있으며, (i link라고도 부른다) usb 부팅은 지원하지 않는 것으로 추정된다. usb 외장하드를 꼽아도 아무 반응이 없었으므로. 또 한편, 컴실에는 소니 DRU-510UL이 있는데, 이놈은 usb와 firewire를 모두 지원하는 착한 놈이다. 그래서 난 4pin-6pin firewire 케이블을 인터넷으로 3000원 주고 구매했다. 이러면 될 줄 알았다. 하지만..


소니의 미친 비호환 정책은 자사 제품의 외장 씨디와도 호환이 안되게 한다. 요즘껀 어떤지 잘 모르겠지만.


이번 사건을 계기로 소니 노트북은 나의 비호감 리스트에 확실하게 등록되었다.

현재 비호감 리스트 : 소니(호환성 제로), 삼성(키보드배치 짜증)


이에 관해 잘 정리된 웹글이 아래의 것이다.
외장씨디가 안되는 것을 확인한 이상, 남은 것은 네트워크 부팅뿐이다. 학교에서는 무리이니 공유기가 있는 집에서 해보자. (네트워크부팅은 dhcp가 되어야 함. 학교는 고정아이피라.. ).. 우분투로 무언가 되었으면 좋겠다;;; 왠지 윈2003깔아야 하는걸지도 모르겠다는 무서움이..

http://www.werkema.com/laptop/booting.html
(링크 깨질 것을 대비하여 긁어두겠음)
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Booting Disks

People have noted that I've suggested installing Windows yourself, and have had several questions about just exactly how to do that. For the most part, installing Windows these days is a pretty easy task: you stick in the CD and away you go (it's a far cry from the old days of tweaking config files on every new installation of Windows 3.1!). The same is true for most of the Linux distributions, for folks that are interested in doing that.

But there is the incessant problem of booting: most OS install disks need to boot before Windows does. The Recovery CDs that come with the U101 need to boot before Windows does too. So this page exists to provide information about how to boot the U101 to either install or repair your operating system.


Step 1. Buy the right equipment.

You'll need the equipment listed under one of the four bullet points below. It's your choice which method you go with.

  • Booting CDs via i.Link (IEEE 1394, a.k.a., FireWire)

    To boot a CD via the i.Link plug (on the left side of the laptop, under the little plastic cover), you will need to have a Sony brand i.Link CD-ROM drive. It won't boot with any other brand --- I tried several. You can use other brands for reading and writing CDs and DVDs, but not for booting. Sony sells four drives that will work: the PCGA-CRWD2 (which I use), the PCGA-DVRW1, the PCVA-DRW3, and the PCGA-DVD1/A.

    (Note that the Sony DRX-510UL drive is compatible with the U101, as indicated on Sony's compatibility page, which means it can be used to read/write discs once Windows has booted, but the red text halfway down the page says specifically, "The DRX-510UL cannot handle [i.e., be used for] system recovery (the reinstallation of the OS).")

    (Note from a reader: The Mitsumi D353FUE USB floppy drive and Sony AP20U DVD/CDRW drive cannot be used for booting either.)

    Make no mistake about it: Sony's drives are expensive. Expect to pay $400 for the PCGA-CRWD2, which is the least expensive of the four. But their drives are small and light, and can run off of the laptop's own power (which most other CD-ROM drives --- including USB and other FireWire drives --- can't).

    If you own one of these drives, they're really easy to use: plug one end of the cable into the drive and the other into the laptop. Then follow the instructions below for Booting CDs.

  • Booting CDs via PCMCIA (PC Card or CardBus)

    I haven't done this myself, but I know of many people who have done it successfully, and the Sony U101 manual does say (in Japanese) that PCMCIA drives can be used for booting. There are many, many brands of PCMCIA drives out there, but with the increased popularity of USB drives, they are getting harder to find. Still, you should be able to get one fairly cheaply and easily if you want one.

    The prices, I've been told, are around $200 for a PCMCIA drive. Your mileage may vary.

    Installation of these drives is going to vary by manufacturer. Usually, you'll just plug in the drive's PCMCIA card into the U101's single PCMCIA slot (on the left side), and plug the drive into a wall socket (for power, of course). Then you can follow the instructions below for Booting CDs. Of course, this may be a little different for your drive, but it shouldn't be very different: you don't need to install drivers to boot, for example.

  • Booting floppy disks via USB

    Sony sells two portable USB floppy drives for the old 1.44" floppy disks. I have not done it myself, but I have received a pretty solid report that you can boot a floppy disk from one of these. Assuming that's true, you could use a combination of several steps to install an OS:
    1. Attach any kind of CD-ROM drive to the U101. Put the install CD in the CD-ROM drive.
    2. Boot from the special boot floppy that is included with your OS's install CD(s).
    3. The floppy will then load in suitable drivers for booting your CD in the CD-ROM drive, and use those drivers to boot the CD.
    That solution is a little more complex than booting from a Sony i.Link CD-ROM drive or a PCMCIA CD-ROM drive, but potentially cheaper.

    I don't know if non-Sony brand USB floppy drives are suitable for booting. My local CompUSA sells a few different brands, but I don't feel like shelling out $50 to test it (who really needs floppies these days, anyway?). I haven't checked Sony's prices on their own drives, but it's reasonable to assume they're double the going rate: $100.

    The two Sony drives that should work are the PCGA-UFD5 and the PCVA-UFD2. I'm not sure what --- if any --- difference there is between these two other than a slight difference in physical size (footprint), since the descriptions for them are otherwise identical.

  • Booting via a network

    The U101 has a Phoenix BIOS in it that supports network booting. It has Intel's boot software, and if you enable it in the BIOS, it will say this on startup:

            Initializing Intel(R) Boot Agent Version 4.1.08
            PXE 2.1 Build 083 (WfM 2.0)


    Supposedly, Linux has a PXE server, but I never successfully got it working, even though I spent the better part of four hours trying. On the other hand, this was my first experience with PXE: if you know how to use it, perhaps this is useful to you.

    If you're dead-set on using network booting, you may have better luck with Microsoft's Remote Administration Server, which apparently was what PXE was designed for (or maybe vice versa: I don't know exactly which of Microsoft or Intel sponsored network booting first, but I know they collaborated on it). Remote Administration Server will cost you Big Buck$ (if you have to ask about the price, you can't afford it), but if you're at a large company with a large Microsoft license, you may already have a copy of it somewhere.

    However, a good summary is that network booting should be reserved for experts only: if you're a novice, don't even bother trying.


Step 2. Set up the BIOS correctly.

Make sure you set up the BIOS correctly first. The BIOS, by default, sets itself to booting optical drives first (CD-ROMs), floppy drives second, and the hard disk third (with the network being a distant fourth, and disabled for booting by default). These defaults are usually correct, but if they aren't, you should go into the BIOS and set them correctly. In fact, the Sony U101 manual actually says that when using the Recovery CDs, you should reset the BIOS first to its defaults. However, if the BIOS is already set to its defaults, you can skip that step.

To get to the BIOS, you simply press <F2> when the machine is first starting up: when you see the Sony logo, or better yet, when the screen is still blank but the power is on, just start hammering <F2> until you see the blue-and-white BIOS screen; if Windows starts booting, hold down the power switch until the machine turns off, and then turn it back on and try again.

The BIOS screens look like these: (Click an image for a larger view)

BIOS: Main BIOS: Advanced BIOS: Security BIOS: Boot BIOS: Exit

The simplest thing to do is to hit <F9> to reset all of the settings to default, and then <F10> to save and exit. This will ensure that the BIOS is set to boot in the order shown in the photo: Optical (CD), then Floppy, then Hard Disk, then Network.


Step 3. Boot the disk.

If the BIOS is set correctly, and you have a drive that works, booting is easy. Make sure your CD-ROM or floppy is in the drive, that the drive's power is turned on (if it uses external power), and then turn on the computer. Your CD or floppy should begin booting almost immediately. From here on out, it's more-or-less smooth sailing.


Troubleshooting

If you see Windows starting up, it didn't boot, which means that one of the following is true:

  1. The CD or floppy disk is damaged or bad.
  2. The drive it's in is broken.
  3. The BIOS is set wrong.
  4. The drive it's in is incompatible with the U101 for booting.
You can test which one of these is true pretty easily. Here's how you test each one of those above:
  1. If the CD or floppy is good for booting, it can boot another computer, right? So stick it in another computer (preferably not a laptop) and reboot the computer. If the CD or floppy doesn't boot, that suggests it's a bad disk. (Just be sure to quickly hit the computer's reset switch after the disk starts booting --- you don't want to reinstall the OS on that machine, after all!)
  2. If the drive is broken, then it won't work if you attach it to another computer. Just attach it to another computer (again, preferably not a laptop), and see if you can read disks with it. If you can, then it works fine.
  3. If the BIOS is set wrong, then go back up to step 2 and make sure that the BIOS is set right. Set it to defaults (F9) if you have to.
  4. This one is hard to test directly. So if your equipment passes the other three tests, then by process of elimination, you must have an incompatibility. Return the drive and get a different one.
 
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DRX-510UL PC operating verified list (03.6.13)

メーカー名 Name Maker パソコン機種名 PC model name OS OS
SONY SONY VAIO PCV-MXS5R VAIO PCV-MXS5R Windows XP Home Edition Windows XP Home Edition
SONY SONY VAIO PCV-HS50B VAIO PCV-HS50B Windows XP Home Edition Windows XP Home Edition
SONY SONY VAIO PCG-NV99M/BP *1 VAIO PCG-NV99M/BP * 1 Windows XP Home Edition Windows XP Home Edition
SONY SONY VAIO PCG-V505/B *1 VAIO PCG-V505 / B * 1 Windows XP Home Edition Windows XP Home Edition
SONY SONY VAIO PCG-U101 VAIO PCG-U101 Windows XP Home Edition Windows XP Home Edition
SONY SONY VAIO PCG-Z1/P *1 VAIO PCG-Z1 / P * 1 Windows XP Professional Windows XP Professional


*1「Drag'n DropCD」がインストールされているパソコンでは、インストール途中で「アップデートの必要のあるファイルは現在使用中です」の確認ダイアログが表示されることがありますが、[無視] をクリックすることでインストールは可能です。 * 1"Drag'n Drop CD" has been installed in the PC, installed in the middleof "the need to update the file is currently in use." Confirmationdialog will be displayed, but click on [ignore] it is installed.
※DRX-510UL を用いてのシステムリカバリ(OS の再インストール)には対応しておりません。 ※ DRX-510UL using the system recovery (re-install OS) is not yet compatible.

上記に掲載されていない機種についても、 必要なパソコン動作環境を満たしていれば、基本的に使用できます。 Not included in the above model of the personal computer operating environment necessary if it meets the basic use.




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