cbrain macrumors 65816 Original poster Jan 16, 2008 #1 Hi, Firstly, this thread is not about Slipstreaming SP2 onto a Windows Disk. I already have a Windows SP2 disc, but is it possible to Slipstream the latest Windows updates this disk? Thanks.
Hi, Firstly, this thread is not about Slipstreaming SP2 onto a Windows Disk. I already have a Windows SP2 disc, but is it possible to Slipstream the latest Windows updates this disk? Thanks.
Eidorian macrumors Penryn Jan 16, 2008 #2 Yes it is possible to slipstream more updates Post-SP2. http://www.ryanvm.net/msfn/updatepack.html http://www.ryanvm.net/msfn/nlite.html
Yes it is possible to slipstream more updates Post-SP2. http://www.ryanvm.net/msfn/updatepack.html http://www.ryanvm.net/msfn/nlite.html
cbrain macrumors 65816 Original poster Jan 16, 2008 #3 Eidorian said: Yes it is possible to slipstream more updates Post-SP2. http://www.ryanvm.net/msfn/updatepack.html http://www.ryanvm.net/msfn/nlite.html Click to expand... Hi, Thanks for the links 🙂. The author of the articles sais that you can use either "nLite" or his own integration tool. Which do you think I should use? Thanks.
Eidorian said: Yes it is possible to slipstream more updates Post-SP2. http://www.ryanvm.net/msfn/updatepack.html http://www.ryanvm.net/msfn/nlite.html Click to expand... Hi, Thanks for the links 🙂. The author of the articles sais that you can use either "nLite" or his own integration tool. Which do you think I should use? Thanks.
Eidorian macrumors Penryn Jan 16, 2008 #4 cbrain said: Hi, Thanks for the links 🙂. The author of the articles sais that you can use either "nLite" or his own integration tool. Which do you think I should use? Thanks. Click to expand... I personally use nLite and I find it to be a very robust and easy to use program. Sadly it does require a Windows computer to use.
cbrain said: Hi, Thanks for the links 🙂. The author of the articles sais that you can use either "nLite" or his own integration tool. Which do you think I should use? Thanks. Click to expand... I personally use nLite and I find it to be a very robust and easy to use program. Sadly it does require a Windows computer to use.
cbrain macrumors 65816 Original poster Jan 16, 2008 #5 Eidorian said: I personally use nLite and I find it to be a very robust and easy to use program. Sadly it does require a Windows computer to use. Click to expand... Thanks, I'll give nLite a try.
Eidorian said: I personally use nLite and I find it to be a very robust and easy to use program. Sadly it does require a Windows computer to use. Click to expand... Thanks, I'll give nLite a try.
cbrain macrumors 65816 Original poster Jan 16, 2008 #6 Hi, I used nLite to Slipstream the updates. What do I do now? Do I use the "Make Bootable ISO" option in nLite and then burn it? Thanks.
Hi, I used nLite to Slipstream the updates. What do I do now? Do I use the "Make Bootable ISO" option in nLite and then burn it? Thanks.
Eidorian macrumors Penryn Jan 16, 2008 #7 cbrain said: Hi, I used nLite to Slipstream the updates. What do I do now? Do I use the "Make Bootable ISO" option in nLite and then burn it? Thanks. Click to expand... You do a direct burn within "Make Bootable ISO". They added this feature in the later versions of nLite. It was annoying to have to make an ISO file and burn it in another application.
cbrain said: Hi, I used nLite to Slipstream the updates. What do I do now? Do I use the "Make Bootable ISO" option in nLite and then burn it? Thanks. Click to expand... You do a direct burn within "Make Bootable ISO". They added this feature in the later versions of nLite. It was annoying to have to make an ISO file and burn it in another application.