![]() ![]() That opened a file, also available online, that seemed to describe the steps that OEMs would need to take in order to automate the installation of Windows on multiple computers. ![]() I began with the “Step-By-Step Deployment” option. I chose “Install all WAIK features.” This opened a “Welcome to Windows Automated Installation Kit” window. I clicked the “Use a file already downloaded” option and navigated to where I had stored that ISO. Going with the Windows PE option first, I did not have to download the large Windows Automated Installation Kit (Windows AIK or just WAIK) ISO disc image because I had already done so. The Windows PE option sounded more complete and capable the Linux option sounded smaller, suitable for installing on a smallish multiboot USB drive I was setting up. It gave me an option of producing either a Windows PE or a Linux rescue environment. In Macrium, I went to Other Tasks > Create Rescue Media. I downloaded and installed it on my Windows desktop, and ran it. Both named Macrium Reflect Free as their first choice. The objective was to find an ISO version of some such utility, so that I could use YUMI to include the program on a bootable jump (flash) drive.Ī search led to Gizmo’s Freeware and lists of drive cloning freeware. The primary objective was to include a freeware alternative on a multiboot USB thumb drive, for those who would not be purchasing something like Acronis. Now I wanted to supplement Acronis with another drive imaging program. Acronis may or may not have been as good as Partition Magic, but it was adequate. For several years at this point, I had been using Acronis True Image Home instead. Sadly, Symantec acquired Partition Magic and ran it into the ground, much as Symantec had done with the previously dominant Norton Utilities. They gave me a way to restore an entire Windows installation in a half-hour or less, saving me many hours of reinstalling Windows and then reinstalling and configuring all of my application programs. These images were relatively compact, taking perhaps half as much space as the imaged partition. For many years, I had used Partition Magic to create images of my program (drive C) partition.
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