This is by far the most frustrating design "feature" in NTLite and it's still never been corrected. I want to create a bootable ISO to install Win 10 Home for a different computer with no OS yet. I'm trying this for at the least the tenth time, and very time I run NTlite (latest) on my Win 10...
I am extremely annoyed with NTLite (latest release, 64_v1.9.0.7501) because after spending hours configuring my Win 10 Pro 2004 session, something I do causes NTLite to crash. But I'm not complaining about the crash, I'm complaining about the fact that every single one of my changes are utterly...
I'm running NTLite under Windows 7 Pro and trying to integrate windows updates into Windows 10 Pro 1903. But every time I try Tools -> Install Updates, it absolutely insists on updating the running Windows 7 instead of the Windows 10 image I've loaded! I've tried selecting the live system and...
So I extracted all files from the unmodified Microsoft Windows 7 64-bit SP1-U Media Refresh edition ISO, selected the Professional edition, and then pressed Load. But I always get the following error message:
Aborted - Image mount
<folder>\Sources\install.wim
[18] There are no more files...
I own a Home license, and I had planned to use NTLite to create a new, trimmed Windows 7 x64 Pro install ISO/Media with the latest updates in order to perform an in-place repair of my main Win 7 system. You see, I need to regain Sleep mode (I've tried perhaps a dozen tutorials/procedures that...
I'm truly baffled by this situation: After installing 64-bit Windows 10 Pro 1809, no BCD store is present. I've tried installing Win 10, from scratch, using three different install ISOs created with NTLite, but none of them have a BCD store after I'm done. I realize that the Boot folder in the...
Hi, all! I own a home license, and am running the latest NTLite version under Windows 7 x64 to customize Windows 10 Pro 1809 x64. I see a popup window with about 50 of these error messages at the end of driver integration every time I run NTLite. The drivers in question are of two types: (1)...
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.