basically you have to manually tell the BIOS to boot from the USB
disk.... the last time I made an install on a USB drive, before
rebooting the first time I did create a new initrd file to tell the
kernel to load the usb modules and be able to mount the root partition
from the USB drive (I do remember to add usb_storage,sg,sbp2 and others)

if you don't create the new initrd, there is a chance that your
installation won't boot.... to fix it, use a rescue system, chroot to
your installation and create the new initrd

best Regards
Victor Prada

On Mon, 2008-01-28 at 14:12 -0500, Jose wrote:
> First thing to check if the computer you are trying to boot up supports 
> usb bootup, when yu are booting up, you may see a meesage "press esc/f8" 
> or something like that to select boot up device, that usually brings up 
> a small menu where you can select which device to boot from, if USB is 
> available select it and that should make your system to boot up from the 
> usb drive.
> 
> Jan Albrecht wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I've installed 10.3 on a USB disc drive as I can't use the internal
> > disc drive in my company notebook.
> > Any idea which option I have to use so that I can boot from my USB
> > drive? Currently it just tells me "Missing operrating system".
> > Thanks
> > Jan
> >
> >   

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