Get RMPrepUSB Here: RMPrepUSB download latest version (fosshub.com)
Get the Dos6.22 IMG file from here as you already did.
With RMPrepUSB (I'm using v.2.1.739) select File->Drive.
Go through the prompts and let it put all the files from the ISO onto the USB stick.
Copy ALL the files on the USB stick to somewhere on your hard drive (these should be the only files in the folder).
"In the Copy OS files from here" section, put the folder that you just copied all the files from the USB stick to.
In Sec.3 select MS-DOS bootable.
In Sec.4 select FAT16 on the left, and "Boot as HDD" and "Use 64hd"**
(Make sure the checkbox next to "5 Copy OS files" is checked)
Select 6 Prepare Drive and follow the prompts. It will partition, format, MBR, bootsector and copy the files to the USB stick.
When 9. is complete, hit Eject Drive and remove USB stick.
That's it! Let me know if it works for you.
Note: I think the problem with just doing the File->Drive thing is that it doesn't put the files in the right place on the USB stick. When you let it prep and copy the files itself, it puts everything in the proper place and order.
** You may have to monkey with the checkboxes in this section. My laptop places the USB Boot under its "Hard Drive" section when it lists it in its BIOS. Your computer may consider it removable storage, or a FDD.
Use this option and download Media Creation Tool if you want to create bootable USB media to perform a clean install on new or existing hardware. To get started you first need a license to install Windows 11 or have a Windows 10 device that qualifies for an upgrade to Windows 11.
To get started, you will first need to have a license to install Windows 11. You can then download and run the media creation tool. For more information on how to use the tool, see the instructions below.
So I made this linux live usb and I'm having trooble returning it to being a regular storage drive.I'm using windows 7, by using compmgmt.msc I can see the drive but I can't format it.usually when right clicking you can format but here I can only click on "help", chich does not help by the way.
After having tooled around with a USB Linux version using your image overwritten or multi partitioned flash pen drive, you might find it necessary to revert it back to a single fat partition (restore the flash pen drive to it's original state) that can again be read by all computers.
You can use the utilities that come with Windows to do this without downloading anything else. DISKPART from the command line as Administrative user will do what you need.
Once inside of the diskpart utility type in list disk, select the USB disk by typing select disk (x) and then clean, this should now wipe the USB stick, you can now create a new partition and format the UBS stick. To create a new partition table on the USB type in create partition primary, then select partition 1, then format fs=fat32 quick. Your USB stick should now be ready to use.
In Windows: Go to Disk Management. Find your disk. It should be a blue and black partition (just like your image). On the BLUE partition, right-click and delete partition. After that, the deleted partition will merge with the black partition and it will be UNPARTITIONED. You should be able to format the unpartitioned space to whatever system you like.
I'm currently using a MacBook Pro with the latest M3 chip and I need some help for creating a bootable Windows 10 USB on my Mac. I've done some research but haven't found clear instructions that are specific to the M3 Macs. The process seems to be a bit different compared to older Mac models, and I'm looking for the best way to accomplish this task without running into compatibility issues.
To create a Windows 10 bootable USB on a M3 Mac, please try out WinBootMate app. It is a dedicated app for creating Windows bootable USB. Most importantly, it supports Apple Silicon Mac as you can see from this guide:
Thanks for your input. Actually, I am not going to run Windows 10 on my M3 MacBook Pro. My dad's PC was crashed and he asked me to install Windows 10 on its computer. My question is how to create a Windows 10 bootable USB on my Mac. I did this with Bootcamp app a couple of years ago but unable to find the app anymore.
Creating a Windows 10 bootable USB on a Mac using the Boot Camp Assistant app is a straightforward process. Boot Camp Assistant is a utility provided by Apple that allows you to create Windows bootable USB on Mac and install Microsoft Windows on your Mac.
I had two physical drives in my laptop: a SSD and a HDD. I've had Windows 10 installed on SSD drive, and later I've installed Ubuntu on HDD with dual boot.Now I wanna replace that HDD with another SSD and do fresh installation of Ubuntu there. I've unplugged the HDD but I can't boot to Windows now - it says boot device not found. If I plug the HDD back I can still boot from there. How can I restore normal Windows booting, to make my laptop operable without that HDD, and then install Ubuntu with dual boot to a brand new drive? I've tried creating recovery USB drive, booting from there, running bootrec.exe/fixmbr and bootrec.exe/fixboot but it had no effect. bootrec/rebuildbcd said that it found windows installation but couldn't find some needed device (I guess it means that HDD, since it looks like it's a boot device now) How can I get rid of that dual boot consequences and fix Windows booting?
I've found the answer. If it could come in handy to someone - the thing was to create EFI partition on the drive where the Windows was installed. It looks like after installing dual boot Ubuntu it moved that partition to the partition where GRUB and Ubuntu were installed and I had to bring it back home.
USB Flash Drive Preparation: the USB flash drive used to install Windows must be configured to boot UEFI. First, create a UEFI bootable USB flash drive that can boot and run the Windows 8.1/10 installer.
Download the free Windows Media Creation Tool from Microsoft and insert a flash drive into your PC. Then, run the Windows Media Creation tool and follow the prompts to automatically create a bootable Windows 10 USB drive.
Select the USB drive you want to use, then click "Next." The Media Creation Tool will download Windows 10 and create a bootable USB drive. The download is several gigabytes in size, so it could take a while if you've got slower internet.
Your Windows 10 bootable USB drive is now ready. You'll need to set your PC to boot from a USB drive rather than a hard drive to use it. Once you do that, you can use it to reinstall Windows 10 on your current computer or install it on a new PC.
Rufus will now guide you through making a few choices. You'll need to choose between a few minor options, but if you're not looking for something extremely specific, just stick with the defaults. The options appear in stages, and once you reach the end, click "Download" button at the bottom to fetch the Windows 10 ISO from Microsoft.
Creating the bootable drive may take a while, as the process is limited by the speed of the USB drive (or USB port) that you're using. You may have a few instances of File Explorer pop up on your screen. Once Rufus is done, you can remove the drive from the USB port and use it to install Windows 10 on another PC, or keep it around as a backup, in case you ever need to perform a fresh reinstall on your own PC.
I hope you can help me. I use PAD on my Windows 10 Desktop PC.
I want my flows to start automatically with windows, without me having to start them all manually with the Play Button after every reboot.
I read somewhere that as a workaround you can use a script on the computer that will run at startup and call a flow with a Request trigger. I'm not quite sure how this would work and if it was an answer to my specific question or to another situation I misunderstood as mine. But if this is the way, I would appreciate some more infos about it, maybe an example.
Greetings
Tonyc
Currently, you can only trigger a desktop flow from a cloud flow or manually. Starting a flow through the command line doesn't seem to work: -Automate-Ideas/Schedule-Power-Automate-Desktop-from-within...
My guess is, since PAD is free and Microsoft is a corporation, which is actually trying to make money - they have a desire to actually generate revenue through a product. A product which also has expenses related to it, through the maintenance and continuous development.
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