+<li>Under both Linux and OS X, you can add the <tt>--drivers</tt> option to
+ have <tt>install.sh</tt> install all the filesystem drivers along with
+ the main rEFInd program. (The default is to <i>not</i> install any
+ drivers.)</li>
+
+<li>Under both Linux and OS X, you can add the <tt>--usedefault <tt
+ class="variable">devicepath</tt></tt> option to install rEFInd to the
+ specified device as <tt>EFI/BOOT/bootx64.efi</tt> and
+ <tt>EFI/BOOT/bootia32.efi</tt>. The specified device must be a valid
+ FAT partition. The idea is that you can easily create a bootable USB
+ flash drive with this option: Create a proper FAT-formatted ESP on a
+ disk (say, <tt>/dev/sdd1</tt>) and then type <tt class="userinput">sh
+ ./install --usedefault /dev/sdd1</tt> to turn the disk into an
+ emergency disk. This option can also be used to install rEFInd to an
+ ESP using the <a href="#naming">alternative naming options</a>
+ described later. This latter usage will result in a bootable rEFInd
+ only if no other OS has already created an NVRAM variable pointing to
+ itself.</li>
+