Someone asked how you make a generic Windows 98 boot CD. Well, what you need to do is shoot Plug 'n Play in the foot.
I am a rather evil person, in that I've migrated Win 95/98/Me hard drives from one machine to the next using a really scary approach:
1. Boot old computer into Safe Mode.
2. Open Device Manager, and start deleting EVERYTHING!
3. Delete all ports, devices, system resources, etc etc. You want that puppy blank.
4. Remove hard drive, put in new/different PC, power up.
When Windows comes alive on the new system, it will look really plain.. 640x480, 16 colors. In fact, in this state, plug 'n play is itself NOT INSTALLED so it can't and won't do plug 'n play detection.
Next step, reinstall plug 'n play. You can do this simply by going to Add New Hardware and detecting any devices. Along the way it'll find some various items plus a weird Plug 'n Play component. Once this installs, Windows will suddenly go mad redetecting drivers, possibly even before you can reboot after this initial detection.
Driver reinstallation is a long process, involving many reboots. If it prompts for a driver search, just keep hitting next next, don't look at CD/floppy/etc, finish. In the end it may have duplicate keyboards and duplicate floppy controllers, which can be removed once it's settled down after ten or so reboots.
Now you can carry on with your old programs, games, documents, etc, but on an 1800mHz system rather than the old 600mhz system.
When creating a CD, if you delete every device, and do NOT reinstall the plug 'n play component, it may run just fine off the CD with no devices whatsoever listed in the device manager. This Windows, with a castrated form of Plug 'n Play may work just fine on many different PC types, without trying to detect and install any new/unknown devices in the various PCs.
If you want, you could Add New hardware, but don't do plug 'n play and only install generic drivers yourself. This way you can pick a generic VGA display driver, a generic network card driver, etc.