I think you can do it with NTLite having extracted the x86 and x64 sources you can try:
Add the x64 source to NTLite
Right click to the Windows Edition and select Export - WIM
Select the install.wim located in x86 source and save it.
or do a search for
Josh Cell's WinAIO Maker Professional...
I have updated 8.1 x86 and is the common ui and text.
Seems like you are using a modified source, as the ui isn't white but the Win 10 setup with the 8.1 install.wim.
I can see 2 SSU integrated and other updates (the source have "pending installs" I know, but all of them are built in except KB5016616?)
is the image saved in the drive or have you extracted from an unmodified ISO to only do the tests?
Not really, some cmd commands or standalone programs without dependencies will run at a very early stage, as some services won't start before oobe, needed for some program install or some windows utilities.
The same as above, but at this stage, "System" user profile is running
Thanks
This is a custom and slim autounattend.xml file, also the boot.wim is slim: Win 8 142 MB - Win 11 239 MB, could be more but I'm ok with that .
Once I have slimmed down the image, I do some more to remove the winsxs crap but keep Windows update for drivers and activation, 2 folders...
Mount the images (all editions in all .wim's)
Find the unattended.xml and remove them all.
In the root folder (the folder containing the folder called sources), check the autounattend.xml and that there is not any unattend.xml inside the iso or flash drive (if working with).
Other mistake that...
If you edit the autounattend in notepad, remove those lines instead of set it to false.
In NTLite's Unattended page:
On the top (Toolbar) check the checkboxes about "Copy to install image..."
I guess there is an unattend.xml in "%windir%\panther" that makes you pull out your hair out of the head.
Acronyms aren´t translated, contractions are translated ok, As Far As I Know (this is more commonly used: AFAIK).
I know very few acronyms and some times try to decode those not recognized.
IIRC: if i recall correctly
AFAIK: as far as i know
IMHO: in my humble opinion (IMO without the h)
Maybe...
I have tried to install win 11 on my niece's laptop (lenovo 2017 I guess), I have disabled secure boot and shift the boot mode to Legacy mode, could install windows and back in BIOS to enable secure boot, it was already enabled.
Read the latest post here...
When OEM key is detected, oobe.cmd and setupcomplete.cmd are skipped.
Go to index forums, open Legacy forums and search for RunOnceEx and follow the guide.
You can make a reg file and integrate when needed.
in NTLite - Sources page load Setup image, go to Components page, expand drivers, find the storage drivers and remove Intel and AMD drivers or download the attached file that I have attached (used for Windows 11 but this preset works for Windows 10) to the NTLite presets folder and load it once...
autopartition is set in autounattend file, I guess
You can ask Dell support.
A "super light" should have removed drivers but keep the bare minimum, Ms generic.
And yep, I have seen that issue before, in my niece's laptop Dell Inspiron.
For old hardware, nvidia drivers had to be removed from...
the issue is no disk or drive not found?
Have you removed intel/amd storage drivers from boot and install wim images?
I have seen that issue with SSD, removing drivers fixed it.
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