+grml2hd installs a running grml system to a harddisk. When rebooting the
+harddisk installation can be modified and changes will find their way to the
+harddisk immediately. grml2usb copies just the compressed chroot filesystem
+(being the squashfs file), some further informational files and a bootloader to
+your device. This way you don't need as much space as with a harddisk
+installation (just a USB device with >=ISO size) and when rebooting the system
+your changes will be lost (even though a persistent root feature is
+work-in-progress). Think of using a better CD version: booting is (usually)
+faster, you don't need to burn a new CD when a new ISO version arrives (just
+install the new ISO using grml2usb) and you can carry additional files on a
+writable medium with yourself.
+
+Why do I have to use a FAT16 filesystem?
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+You have to use a FAT16 filesystem if you consider using syslinux (being the
+default). Syslinux currently does not support any other filesystems. If you want
+to use another filesystem (like ext2/3) consider using the --grub option
+instead.
+
+I think I've got a really cool idea!
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Please <<X7,report it to the author>>. Or even better: send us a patch.
+
+I've found a bug!
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Please <<X7,report it to the author>>. Please provide usage examples and output
+of your grml2usb commandline (consider using the "--verbose" option).