Quick Search


Tibetan singing bowl music,sound healing, remove negative energy.

528hz solfreggio music -  Attract Wealth and Abundance, Manifest Money and Increase Luck



 
Your forum announcement here!

  Free Advertising Forums | Free Advertising Board | Post Free Ads Forum | Free Advertising Forums Directory | Best Free Advertising Methods | Advertising Forums > Other Methods of FREE Advertising > Guest Books Directory

Guest Books Directory Here is a great way to get some inbound links to your site, and message heard by people who also post and read these books. (Tip: Dont use your real email address on them)

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old 04-06-2011, 04:06 PM   #1
standard9755
First Lieutenant
 
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 483
standard9755 is on a distinguished road
Default Office Home And Business clubbing of windows vista

i desire to club the windows vista and windows server 2008 within a single bootable
disk.
please aid for your previously mentioned problem.
i have currently performed the clubbing of photos of .wim files.
i failed on this technique.
As the internal files of both the OS is equivalent ...i want a a further way out
to extract the appropiate file from your single set up.wim file .
"CH" wrote:
> Interestisng post and info. Apprciated the links you and *Mark VDBerg posted
> a while ago.
>
> CH
>
> "MICHAEL" <u158627_emr@dslr.net> wrote in message
> news:uVWcYS$rGHA.1596@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
> >
> >
> > Vista^as installation plan is dramatically different to any previous
> > version of Windows: rather than being an ^ainstaller^a, the install DVD is
> > actually a preinstalled copy of Windows that simply gets decompressed onto
> > your PC.
> >
> > So how does it adjust to your hardware? How do you slipstream updates and
> > drivers into it? Can you also ^apreinstall^a your favourite apps into your
> > Vista DVD?
> >
> > And most importantly, can you build a custom Vista install DVD that doesn^at
> > set up all the ^afree AOL trial^a crap that typically comes bundled in with
> > Windows?
> >
> > We asked Microsoft Australia Technology Specialist for Windows Client,
> > John Pritchard how it all works and got some surprising answers.
> >
> >
> >
> > Dan Warne: Vista^as ^aimage based install^a basically means that what you get
> > on your Vista DVD is a preinstalled image of Vista, is that right?John
> > Pritchard: Yes, what users^a DVDs will contain is the install Windows
> > Imaging (.WIM) file, which is basically our operating system folders
> > wrapped up into one image file.
> >
> > The users will put their DVD in, boot off it and run the setup and it will
> > look to them like they are doing an install, but what it is really doing
> > is grabbing the install.wim and executing that as an upgrade or clean
> > install depending on what the user wants.
> >
> > Dan Warne: So it^as basically decompressing a preinstalled version of Vista
> > onto the hard drive, and when you do an upgrade, it^as basically putting a
> > clean set up of Vista on there and migrating your XP settings into Vista,
> > right?
> >
> > John Pritchard: Yes,Windows 7 Professional Key, that^as right, it^as a compressed image. We will ship
> > it with fast compression, and then users just desire to have the space on
> > the hard disk for that image to be offloaded and decompressed.
> >
> > There^as also the advantage that it is file-based, not sector-based image,
> > so you can set up the image onto your hard drive without overwriting
> > other data.
> >
> > We also have advanced User State Migration with Vista. Users can take
> > their settings from a previous version of Windows,Windows 7 Enterprise, migrate them off the PC
> > and put them into an installable format for a new PC.
> >
> > So, for example if they wanted to wipe their XP installation completely
> > and start again with Vista, they could take their data off their XP
> > installation with the User State Migration Toolkit and then restore it
> > into Vista once they^ave completed their installation.
> >
> > The User State Migration Toolkit can collect settings from Windows 2000
> > and XP SP.
> >
> > Dan Warne: So is that something that ordinary consumers could use to
> > migrate data from an old PC to a new Vista PC? Would it be easy enough for
> > consumers to use?
> >
> > John Pritchard: Yes, it would be easy enough for consumers to use, though
> > in that market there^as also the Files and Settings Transfer Wizard.
> >
> > James Bannan: I^ave used the XP Tool, the Transfer Wizard, a number of
> > times for upgrading computers. The User State Migration Tool is more
> > powerful but it is command-line based, so not as user friendly. You^ad
> > certainly find that power users would be drawn to it, definitely,
> > especially as you can combine it with the WIM file image being a file
> > based imaging format, meaning it^as not an overwrite of your whole hard
> > drive (unless you wish it to be).
> >
> > Dan Warne: So in terms of the way the WIM system works, would it be
> > possible to use WIM to back up, say, a Dell laptop completely as an image,
> > and then restore it onto a Lenovo laptop with different hardware, for
> > example? Would Windows be able to adjust to that different hardware?
> >
> > John Pritchard: Yes, and that^as one of the great benefits of it. The WIM
> > format, being a file-based format, is separated from the hardware you^are
> > running it on. So you could take an IBM, Dell, Toshiba, whatever you^ave
> > got, build your image up in it, and the way the traditional imaging
> > plan works, you can sysprep the machine, drop it and then create the
> > image.
> >
> > That way you can restore the image on multiple platforms. The caveat is
> > that I wouldn^at go from a 32-bit architecture to a 64-bit architecture,
> > but staying inside 32-bit, you are no longer tied to the Hardware
> > Abstraction Layer (HAL) any more, and that is a great feature that
> > releases us from so many challenges we^ave had in the past with HALs and
> > multiple photographs.
> >
> > You can now build your golden machine just like before, capture the image
> > and then that image can be deployed widely and as you will need to.
> >
> > Dan Warne: what about keeping an image up to date. Users have had to get
> > quite expert in doing this with XP because of its very out-of-date
> > driverbase. Is this made easier with WIM?
> >
> > John Pritchard: yes, you can update WIM photos very easily.
> >
> > There are two basic steps: one, you can just load a folder anywhere in the
> > image you like. If there^as something that requires a folder under the
> > system32 directory that is completely unique to some particular hardware,
> > you have the liberty to inject that folder into your WIM.
> >
> > The other way is that you can use a DriverLoad utility, and that will
> > actually place important things like disk drivers into their required
> > location in the image, so when you are running a setup, it can look
> > through its normal repository for drivers and bang, it^as there, because it
> > has been injected.
> >
> > James Bannan: Out of interest, this all does rely on the image having been
> > sysprepped, is that right? Because even though it is a comparable deal with
> > XP, even if the drivers are there, it does still desire to run through that
> > setup plan of assigning drivers to hardware. With WIM, I assume you
> > couldn^at just do a clean build, capture, inject the drivers, and drop it
> > back on? It would still need to have to run through the driver allocation?
> >
> > John Pritchard: With the actual released build of Vista, a user can mount
> > the install.wim file on the Vista install DVD, mount it and put the
> > drivers in themselves through the command line utilities.
> >
> > When they unmount it, they^ad have to burn yet another DVD of course, but they
> > could have put drivers in there with it mounted into the file system. The
> > drivers are actually injected into the right locations in there.
> >
> > That^as with an image that comes from Microsoft; if they need to build
> > their own golden machine, they have to reboot it, boot into something like
> > WinPE, and then use ImageX to capture the image, and once you^ave got that
> > WIM image, you can inject drivers into it just like the Microsoft-supplied
> > WIM.
> >
> > Dan Warne: A lot of drivers nowadays come bundled up into EXE files that
> > install everything into the right place for you. How would you inject
> > those into a WIM image?
> >
> > John Pritchard: You can actually do that with the unattend.xml file. You
> > would put those EXE files on the disk and let the unattend operation set up
> > them. If you look at the Windows System Image Manager, it has the
> > capability to say, ^alook at these packages on a distribution share, and
> > run these drivers as an application after you have built the system.^a
> >
> > James Bannan: at what point in the install do those apps run?
> >
> > John Pritchard: They^are accomplished in part seven, that^as after the system has
> > been built, before logon. Now, with the EXE packaged drivers, you can
> > install them onto your golden machine, then build an image based on that.
> > That^as the other way of doing it, of course.
> >
> > Dan Warne: I know that I've a cynical journalist^as mind, but isn^at that
> > a bit of a risk for malware to be injected into Vista install DVDs, given
> > that those apps are executed before logon?
> >
> > John Pritchard: Yes, well I would certainly recommend when people are
> > looking at any content they make sure they have the approved and
> > hologrammed DVDs to make sure they^are dealing with the genuine product, to
> > get away from not knowing where the source comes from. But if they have
> > got control of the unattend and built it themselves then hopefully they
> > know what they are putting on it.
> >
> > James Bannan: plus I believe ImageX itself can do a verify on a WIM so I
> > guess that is an advantage if you have got the original WIM, a corrupted
> > WIM won^at match up to the original.
> >
> > Dan Warne: I guess like any software that can be corrupted, people will
> > just have to go back to the original hashes.
> >
> > John Pritchard: I think it comes back to people having the original
> > software first, and that is the level of assurance I would look for.
> >
> > Dan Warne: I guess I was thinking more of a corporation that might have a
> > WIM image sitting somewhere on a network share and a rogue employee might
> > go in and add something to the image.
> >
> > James Bannan: it^as probably a bit too much to rely on WIM to be able to
> > protect itself from rogue IT administrators^a| you^are asking a lot.
> >
> > Dan Warne: yeah, I guess if you have file access you can do pretty much
> > whatever you like can^at you.
> >
> > James Bannan: pretty much.
> >
> > John Pritchard: Also with larger enterprises they^all have something like
> > SMS, and the users don^at see that. It^as deployed under SMS like an
> > application^a| it^as managed centrally and that has very good plan around
> > that to protect corporate WIM pictures.
> >
> > James Bannan: So could you inject the Office installation files into your
> > WIM, and could you have different installs for different machines, based
> > on different unattend.xml files for example?
> >
> > John Pritchard: Certainly,Office Home And Business, and this is where you^are getting into
> > leveraging not only the unattend file, but also the Windows System Image
> > Manager. You can set up all your applications as packages, so you can have
> > one unattend file that installs office, and some other that doesn^at. An
> > unattend file can do patches, drivers and applications, effectively
> > simulating a GUI run-once.
> >
> > James Bannan: I guess then, if your home user who is interested within this
> > kind of thing but doesn^at have access to WDM or SMS, they^are just going to
> > have to customise a number of unattends and specify the one they want when
> > they do the build.
> >
> > John Pritchard: Yes, and if you choose to build your own DVD and put your
> > unattend file into the root of the DVD, there^as only one option there. It^as
> > called autounattend.xml ^a it has to be that name because it^as what the
> > build method looks for. So if you wanted to have various unattended
> > installations, you^ad just have to manually switch those files yourself.
> >
> > James Bannan: I guess though you could probably have an open-source PXE if
> > you wanted to.
> >
> > John Pritchard: That one I don^at know about.
> >
> > Dan Warne: [sarcastic] open source is the enemy, James!
> >
> > James Bannan: [laughs] yes but Microsoft is interested in how its software
> > integrates with everything else, surely^a|
> >
> > John Pritchard: It^as always good there to hear from what our customers are
> > saying and what they have to have.
> >
> > Dan Warne: What about the method of updating the Vista image with service
> > packs and patches? The course of action for slipstreaming in XP is relatively
> > straightforward once you know how but it isn^at exactly intuitive, or as
> > easy as running Windows Update.
> >
> > John Pritchard: Well, in Vista, we can do that once the machine is built
> > and on the network; you can use WSUS, or if they have an SMS environment
> > you can patch the deployed machine in either of those two ways, so that
> > doesn^at change.
> >
> > But once you build an image, it poses a problem because it^as likely to be
> > out of date as soon as you close it off. So, with that,Office Home And Student, you can take the
> > image, and say, ^aOK, I^all build a command line file that enables me to
> > mount the image, apply the pictures to the OS while it is mounted, and then
> > seal up and commit the changes to the image, and distribute the image.^a
> >
> > Dan Warne: So is there an automated way to grab all the patches off
> > Windows Update and automatically apply them to an image? Or would you have
> > to download each patch individually and manually apply them?
> >
> > John Pritchard: You^ave got the image effectively mounted as a file system,
> > so you^ad apply the patches as command-line patches. You would have to get
> > each patch and apply it. It^as like slipstreaming SP2 into an SP1
> > installation.
> >
> > But if you have an image that^as, say 2.5GB, instead of patching it and
> > having to push that entire image file out to different file shares, what
> > you can do is instead of sending out the whole patched image again, you
> > simply make your patch commands and then just send out the command line to
> > mount the image and apply the patches locally and unmount the image. So at
> > each point, they can run a series of batch files to update their image.
> >
> > Dan Warne: So, in terms of customising the Vista install DVD to remove
> > software components. Because inevitably within a large operating system there^as
> > a lot of stuff in there that people don^at want or use, like in XP, the MSN
> > Browser. Is there an interface for configuring WIM that is a bit more
> > componentised, rather than just looking at the files on the disk? Can you
> > actually select apps in Windows and just get them ripped out of the image?
> >
> > John Pritchard: Yes, where I^ad go to for that is if you take the Microsoft
> > DVD that will be shipped out,Purchase Windows 7, we again go back to the unattend.xml and you
> > can build an unattend.xml that says, ^aI want this, I want this, I want my
> > partitions configured like this, do all that but also select that you want
> > this game, but not solitaire, or whatever.^a
> >
> > You can then put that unattend.xml file on a USB key and if you plug that
> > in when Vista is installing, it will base its install method on the
> > unattend.xml instruction file. It means that you don^at have to build a
> > custom DVD for a custom set up. Consumers can take the System Image
> > Manager, build up the unattend as they would like, put it on a USB key and
> > use that to set up through the Microsoft-standard image file.
> >
> > Dan Warne: Cool, so that^as presumably a new feature in Vista? I knew you
> > could script Windows installations previously, but you^ave never been able
> > to run that script from a USB key, right?
> >
> > John Pritchard: Yes, that^as right. This is where we^ave got the ability to
> > look for the USB port. It^as like having a WINNT.SIF file being looked for
> > in the root of a floppy drive. What I do for my customers is they have the
> > bootable Vista build DVD and they put their unattend on a USB key, which
> > saves them having to rebuild their DVDs all the time.
> >
> > James Bannan: a lot of corporate customers more than likely have the
> > facilities to be able to install off a network share, won^at they. It^as a
> > fairly safe guess that most power users would have more than one computer
> > at home. You^ad have your file server, or something along those lines, so
> > you wouldn^at have to go to the length of having a USB key, would you. You
> > could just have the unattend.xml in the share root and launch the
> > installation from there, is that right?
> >
> > John Pritchard: Yes, you can do, if you boot up under something like
> > WinPE, because you obviously have to be able to get to the share, get an
standard9755 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off


All times are GMT. The time now is 02:13 AM.

 

Powered by vBulletin Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Free Advertising Forums | Free Advertising Message Boards | Post Free Ads Forum