Good Evening Everyone,
I am in the process of setting up my process flow for repairing computers, and I am looking into automating windows installs.
I have read a lot of threads on this board about this topic, and usually the answers seem to be either slipstreamed iso's or universal images.
I was wondering if anyone would like to chime in with which one they choose to do.
From my own experience in the past, imaging is great - but when i created universal images they were for corporate use and all of them were dell desktops which helped out alot as far as hardware goes. I also used a driverpack added to the image for driver installation. I am not sure how well this would transition over to all the different makes and models that residential customers would present me with.
I have never created a slipstream iso but from reading on here they can be quite large (which doesn't really matter as I plan on pxebooting to get to the installer), and it seems like it could be quite slow since you would be doing an actual install with all the updates, rather than "slapping" an image on the machine.
Thanks,
Lumien
I am in the process of setting up my process flow for repairing computers, and I am looking into automating windows installs.
I have read a lot of threads on this board about this topic, and usually the answers seem to be either slipstreamed iso's or universal images.
I was wondering if anyone would like to chime in with which one they choose to do.
From my own experience in the past, imaging is great - but when i created universal images they were for corporate use and all of them were dell desktops which helped out alot as far as hardware goes. I also used a driverpack added to the image for driver installation. I am not sure how well this would transition over to all the different makes and models that residential customers would present me with.
I have never created a slipstream iso but from reading on here they can be quite large (which doesn't really matter as I plan on pxebooting to get to the installer), and it seems like it could be quite slow since you would be doing an actual install with all the updates, rather than "slapping" an image on the machine.
Thanks,
Lumien