This worked reliably to create the TinyCore USB stick - NO CD/DVD required - done on a W2K box.
Two methods - no NETBOOTIN required - but it does take a few more steps and two free utilities.
Did one on the W2K box - method 2 on a Linux box.
http://forum.tinycorelinux.net/index.php?topic=9195.0Tested Live Linux today - a fat feature version of NETBOOTIN with a very .y (ok - eye candy) front end.
Worked well for the boot - absolutely - but claims to allow a "Virtual Box" inside of Windows, requiring a software package owned by Oracle. Tried that - bombed (W2KSP4).
However one thing Live Linux did was modify append file - putting in UID tags - which I assume ?might? help with persistence issue I have had.
Also, since my laptop doesn't boot to USB am testing PLOP BOOT MGR to see if I can get a new FAT partition I inserted onto my C drive to boot.
Method:
1. Made USB drive
2. SYSLINUX -f G: (the new blank partition - logical drive - on the physical C: drive) -f required to force
3. Copied all TC files created by netbootin, including hiddens from USB to G:
4. Reboot - Plop takes over - selected partition - black screen.
Same thing with attempt to get Plop to boot to USB drive.
Files in G: root folder include:
ldlinux.sys (hidden)
ubknkern
ubinit
etc. - exactly like a unetbootin install with associated boot and isolinux folders and files below.
Also, installed Robert's latest R2 - seems to work fine. Haven't tried Perl yet, but does install/boot on other laptop that recognizes USB boots.
...and tinkering with Plop to see if I can get it to see and boot the partition (or a USB drive) ...which would partially resolve this "Windows Install" issue by giving TC a place to live - live on a HD in a single HD PC - (not in a virtual box) - by merely selecting a boot option, even when USB boot is not supported and no CD is present. Plop utility and forum support is sterling - as it is here - thanks - so I am fairly confident boot issue will be resolved.
By the way - got a friend to try TC today - Vista user - she almost fell out of her chair for the boot speed.