Create windows 2000 cd




















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Post Views: 1, Join Our Newsletter Learn about the latest security threats, system optimization tricks, and the hottest new technologies in the industry. Example: on a Win Pro cd these three files should now be in the cd-root folder. TST If you put more or less of the identifier files in the root of the cd, then booting will fail!!

See examples for Win Server cd below. You can now update the support tools and the deployment tools. The files SP3SupportTools. It can be wise to also include the SP3 file itself. This way the cd can also be used to update excisting installations. Create a seperate folder for this file.

Now you are ready to create the cd. See example of using NERO software below. You may want or need to tweak some details in single files on your cd. Further enhancements options Content of the further enhancements options: A1. Your original cd does not have the i folder in the root A2.

You want to remove the need to enter an OEM number A3. Automatically use an answer file like the unattend. Subsequent unattended installation of IE 6, Media Player and any. Your original cd does not have the i folder in the root. Automatically using an answer file like the unattend. A standard Windows installation will ask you a series of questions during the installation, like regional settings, time zone, network details, which accessory programs to install and more.

It is possible to predetermine the choises of these setup details, and have the setup program read the answers automatically from an answer file.

Here is another example of unattended bootCD and winnt. It also has automatic partitioning and details about the network setup. Silent install automatic and unattended install of ie.

MSI based file. When i enter into the cd trough floppy and type the setup file it says this program cannot be run in MS-DOS mode.. There is software at the back end of a Windows CD that will help you create a 4-floppy boot set. There is also a download at Microsoft, but it is difficult to find. You can also copy the install files to sectors on the hard drive, then boot or install from those sectors. Creating a Windows boot disc otherwise is extremely difficult, as Microsoft intentionally made it impossible to do.

Usually a W2K disk that does not boot is damaged by scratches. You can use one of the buffing or polishing devices to polish the disc but don't overdo it which will usually fix most problems except deep scratches that run diagonally.

We cannot tell you how to make an illegal copy, as per the policy of this forum. The problem is you can't run setup. But you will be amazed at how they do not work when you are working with a damaged disc.

These are the same as previously described. You can download them to a new folder where you use a number of different boot setup software. But they do not help much if the original disc is damaged, and you need more than the ability to boot Computer hope, the way it is typed, does not open.

Try reading what you Google. You will be amazed at what you can learn. I believe the original poster was just not able to boot since he had a bad CD. Just a thought. We are well familiar with the tools at the www.

Perhaps you have had better luck. But we have found that very small tool k only provides repair for the four boot sectors. The damage we find which stops the boot install are nearly always found elsewhere on the disc.

Any scratch anywhere on the disc prevents the read. Of course, bypassing the boot sectors it is worth a try. When he said it "doesn't boot" I may have assumed too much in thinking it would not detect either. Of course, if he only wants to bypass those first four or so sectors, he might get by with a little juggling. I assumed that, but without the broader knowledge and long experience of a professional tech, I suspect he would never have been able to create the image from a damaged disc when it is in such a state that it will not boot.

The average high end user still does not have the types of drives and setup necessary to copy or create an ISO image from a damaged disc.



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