Adding to what Chris said, I've recently had very good luck copying the contents of CD-ROMs on to the hard disk. I haven't tried this with LaserROM, but you might be able to copy the contents of the CD to a share that *can* be the root of a logical drive. I have about 7 CDs full of stuff including the entire MS Encarta 98 reference suite installed on my hard disk at home. No more CD swapping, everything comes up quicker, and I can run everything at the same time. This extravagant use of disk space was made possible when CostCo started selling the 7Gb Maxtor Ultra DMA IDE drives for $280 and I was unable to resist. There's also a VirtualCD product out there which is specifically designed for copying the *entire* contents of a CD into a file and emulating the MSCDEX calls so that the application can't tell that it's not a real CD. This might be required for some programs which use the existence of the CD as a form of copy protection. So far I've gotten away with just copying everything from the CD into the root of a drive partition. Back to the original problem though, I suspect that LaserROM, being a relatively low-tech windows app, probably wants to see all of its files at the root of a logical drive, and probably can't deal with subdirectories. Are you sure you can't export the specific location as a separate "share"? This would let you map a separate logical drive to that location. LaserROM definitely needs a logical drive from my experience and won't just work with a network path. G.