Or just have the disk in the drive and tell Nero to use the bootdisk in the floppy and it will burn a bootable CD
Hmm, so ok, if you don't have the floppy drive to put that boot disk then where do you tell nero to look?
Actually I think the reason I hate floppies is garbage quality of new floppies! I have some old 720k floppies and early generic 1.44 floppies from around 1988 or 89. Those STILL WORK, I have disks I bought 3 months ago and they have problems??
Truely, I bought 100 generic floppies (720k I think) back when I first got into computers around 1988 or 1989. I had alot of those unused and still new about 1991 or 1992 and I scanned an entire 300 page color catalog of products, cut the pics and item discription out for each product and saved them to those old/new floppies, plus some extras I bought then, about 75-90 disks total. About 2 months ago I wanted one of those pics, and yes the disk still worked without any error! Needless to say this was not the same drive or system that wrote that disk. I tested a few of them and they all read fine.
The other day I was at the office and needed a small file from another persons system, they stuck it on a floppy for me and I could not use it, gave it back to them and they could not use it either and we both ended up getting "disk is not formatted" errors. That was one of those junk colored see through Floppies, I have had alot of problems with new floppies like that and with lots of systems, not just one.
It's like after you expose them to air for several days/weeks they up and die. Maybe Disney made those as a prototype for their great disposable DVDs that flopped so bad.
In any case, most programs are such memory and space hogs not alot fits a floppy so I have a usb thumb drive for transporting stuff now. But if floppies were reliable I would still use them more often, but I can't save a file at the office just to find out the floppie don't work when I get home. Cd's are such a pain when you only need a little text file or two!
In the old days even the cheap generic floppies were reliable and lasted (my 1988 disks), I suppose if you search out high quality disks they are out there, after all not that long ago I was getting drivers on floppies still for stuff like network cards. And I just bought something not long ago I got another floppie, and those ones still seem to last. Any I have bought in the last few years seem to have a 50/50 chance of working when I get one out to use now.