Hellbovine
Well-Known Member
Hey ddbeyhacett, you have a lot of posts all over the place in a ton of different websites on the internet. It only took me a quick Google to see that you are also posting this in other places too...
Let me see if I can get you situated by offering you a whole new approach to what you are trying to do, because it sounds like you have very limited computer knowledge and I think you are trying to do something that's beyond your abilities.
1) Is this ISO you want to make just for your own personal usage?
2) Are you into gaming, or what are you using the ISO for, what's the main thing you want?
3) Tell me what kind of computer you have, is it a laptop or desktop, and did you buy it from one of the brands like Dell, or did you build it yourself?
4) What model number is your computer, if you bought it from a store?
The thing is, you don't *have* to shove everything into an ISO. In fact, a lot of stuff won't even work right when you do, so unless you know how to troubleshoot these things then it isn't worth trying to do it that way. There's also no performance gain to be had by sticking drivers into the ISO, it's just for convienance if you need to reinstall the OS often, and even then I don't think it's a great idea to stick Nvidia in there because the drivers get updated so frequently and you should be using the latest drivers whenever you can.
The better method for people with limited computer knowledge is to keep the ISO simple with only a few tweaks that you actually need (I can give you some registry keys to import) and then just have another extra USB drive that you keep your drivers and stuff on. Then install Windows fresh with your simple ISO, and plug in your USB drive with drivers, install them, and you're good to go.
Let me see if I can get you situated by offering you a whole new approach to what you are trying to do, because it sounds like you have very limited computer knowledge and I think you are trying to do something that's beyond your abilities.
1) Is this ISO you want to make just for your own personal usage?
2) Are you into gaming, or what are you using the ISO for, what's the main thing you want?
3) Tell me what kind of computer you have, is it a laptop or desktop, and did you buy it from one of the brands like Dell, or did you build it yourself?
4) What model number is your computer, if you bought it from a store?
The thing is, you don't *have* to shove everything into an ISO. In fact, a lot of stuff won't even work right when you do, so unless you know how to troubleshoot these things then it isn't worth trying to do it that way. There's also no performance gain to be had by sticking drivers into the ISO, it's just for convienance if you need to reinstall the OS often, and even then I don't think it's a great idea to stick Nvidia in there because the drivers get updated so frequently and you should be using the latest drivers whenever you can.
The better method for people with limited computer knowledge is to keep the ISO simple with only a few tweaks that you actually need (I can give you some registry keys to import) and then just have another extra USB drive that you keep your drivers and stuff on. Then install Windows fresh with your simple ISO, and plug in your USB drive with drivers, install them, and you're good to go.