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  • Windows Live Xp
    카테고리 없음 2020. 2. 28. 08:42
    Live
    1. Windows Live Mail Xp
    2. Windows Xp Live Usb Iso

    Though Windows has evolved and we have, but for justified reasons, we still need Windows XP around for PCs with low configuration and ofcourse for Speed.Now you have one more reason to love XP — It’s portable, bootable LIVE from USB drive.The idea of XP LIVE USB is interesting and infact very easy provided you follow the instructions below –The good thing about this method is, you don’t need hefty 700mb XP installer, its pretty small -54MBand proceed with instructions:Step 1. Un-Rar the file and you will get 7 extracted files. The first 2 files are the manual in Germany & Russian language. You might not found the English documentation because seems developed by a Germany. First of all, we need to provide a USB stick with minimal size of 256MB. Incase you are wondering what the heck is BartPE- It’s a utility using which this image is built. The process of creating BartPE image is complex, and I’m not discussing about it here.Step 2.

    Then, make a fresh quick format with hpusbfw.exe tool included in the packages. Format using this utility with the settings shown in the image below.Step 3. After the format is done, Copy all the files from a folder on USB stick. Reboot the system & make sure that you enable the USB boot giving USB higher precedence in BIOS settings – while the USB memory is still plugged in. Let the computer boot from it.

    The boot process speed depends upon your USB storage speed. It was pretty decent for me.Step 4.

    There’s no step 4, when you boot into windows, You are done. 🙂The default desktop background is covered by dark bartPE pictures. In the left corner are showing up a “Go” button — representing a Start button in a real Windows. Click on it, it will raise a list of simple menu pointing to the default applications such as Windows Wordpad, the Calculator program, Paint image editor & a file manager called A43 replacing the Windows Explorer instead.Note that this USB live also equipped with the fully functionality of command prompt.

    Windows Live Mail Xp

    It’s DOS is actually same as the one from a real.Look at the picture below, “About” link from Paint programIt shows you exact same About page as the one you might found in a real Windows XP. However, it is in Germany. Don’t worry about that. Anyway, you don’t even want to read it.It has great advantages, eg: portability, In emergency-to rescue the system,etc. It’s NOT legally allowed to do so, do it at your own risk.Happy Portability!

    You can try this in order to make your USB bootable:1. Download this file and save it to your hard disk (for example D:)2.

    Windows Live XpWindows live essentials 2011

    Extract the file then you you will get a folder named “bootsect” which contains 2 file3. Plug your USB key in. Open the command prompt (Start+Run –type: cmd –hit Enter)4. In the command prompt, navigate to the new extracted folder (in this example is ) by typing as below and hit Enter:cd D: navigate to D drivecd bootsect navigate to bootsect folder5. When you’re in the bootsect folder, type the following command and hit enterbootsect /nt52 G: where G: is your USB driveyou may see the message indicates that your USB has been successfully updateNow try to boot your computer by this USB.Hope this can help you. Several people comment that this doesn’t work for them; it does work for others.

    Windows Xp Live Usb Iso

    This is probably down to the way the USB memory stick is formatted; there are two ways (one is “hybrid”), and not all computers work with both. I had the same issue with a Fujitsu-Siemens Amilo Pro laptop (notoriously finicky). My solution: download the latest version of Multiboot, run it and use it to load file bartpe.iso (and no other files from this.RAR) onto the multiboot USB. See the multiboot page for details; it’s very straightforward.I’m commenting to an old thread, because I just found it, tried it, found it didn’t work, and worked around it. Because my Vaio P has only Linux on the HD, and no room for a Windows partition because it’s a small expensive SSD. But Sony only provides BIOS updates in the form of a WINDOWS executable. Not DOS, Windows.

    And the actual flasher is a Windows executable, not merely the self extracting archive/installer outer wrapper. And I really want that bios update because it enables VT in the cpu.Before you mention it, I have a FreeDOS live usb that boots and runs great and I use all the time it to flash many motherboards and raid cards.But sometimes the vendor only supplies a single option and sometimes it’s Windows.

    So, a live XP or 7 usb is pretty damned preferable to deleting my Linux install from the hd and installing Windows over top of it, or, living without the bios update and thus without virtualbox and other virtualization apps.

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