Whenyou make an image backup, all the bits and bytes for each partition are captured. And when an image backup is restored, the previous contents of the drive are overwritten, as the image for each partition is written to the target drive afresh and anew.
To create an image, special software is used to build a single file (or collection of files) that represent the whole disk or its constituent partitions. Disk image files are often stored using special binary formats. Thus, for example, the .ISO image format (a CD- or DVD-oriented disk image format based on the ISO-9660 standard, which Microsoft uses to distribute images of the Windows installation environment) contains an exact duplicate of a disk image, including data saved in files on that disk, as well as file system information and related metadata.
I recommend four workable, respectable, and highly regarded Windows backup tools that work with Windows 10 and 11 with equal facility. Alas, the first listed (and my personal favorite) no longer offers a free version. IMO, the tool is good enough to be worth buying, but for those who cannot purchase, the other three are acceptable.
All four tools make compact, speedy, and reliable image backups of Windows 10 and Windows 11 PCs. Below I walk through using EaseUS Todo Backup on Windows 11 as an illustration of how such programs work. Your mileage may vary, depending on which tool you choose.
To use the other functions, you must first pay for and activate a license for a commercial version of the program. Every window in the free version has an Upgrade button in the lower left corner to let you do that (not to mention the many advertising screens the free version also displays to its users).
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We are looking for a Windows 11 Docker image to execute some command line tests. I found this microsoft-windows - Official Image Docker Hub but all OS versions are Windows 10. Does any one know if there is a Win11 image?
As for the OS version, thanks for the info; I never thought it that way! I checked Windows releases Windows 10 - release information Microsoft Learn and Windows 11 - release information Microsoft Learn. Seems that the oldest Windows 11 release build is 22000.194, so all these 19042 and earlier builds seem to be Windows 10 then.
This is possible for Windows 10 Pro but you cannot do it by setting the Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > Control Panel > Personalization > Force a specific default lock screen and logon image GPO setting.
Native Image sets up build environments automatically if it can find an appropriate Visual Studio installation in a known location.With the GraalVM JDK on your PATH, you can therefore now run the native-image utility in a Command Prompt (cmd) or a PowerShell (pwsh).
Repair a Windows image using DISM. You can repair offline Windows image in a WIM or VHD file, or an online Windows image. An online Windows image will also attempt to repair itself if it becomes unserviceable. The repair source for this operation is the same source that is used for Features on Demand and is determined by Group Policy settings. For more information, see Configure a Windows Repair Source. When you use the DISM tool to repair an online or offline image, you can use the /Source argument with the /RestoreHealth argument to specify additional repair source locations to use to search for the required files.
When you use the /CheckHealth sfc argument, the DISM tool will report whether the image is healthy, repairable, or non-repairable. If the image is non-repairable, you should discard the image and start again. If the image is repairable, you can use the /RestoreHealth argument to repair the image.
If you do not specify a /Source for the repair files, the default location for Features on Demand is used. For more information, see Configure a Windows Repair Source. If you specify more than one /Source, the files are copied from the first location where they are found and the rest of the locations are ignored. You can use /LimitAccess to prevent the DISM tool from using Windows Update as a repair source or as a backup repair source for online images.
In some cases, an image can be corrupted while modifying it with DISM. Use /Cleanup-MountPoints to repair it. This command will not unmount images that are already mounted, nor will it delete images that can be recovered using the /Remount-Image command.
I often need to resize images for various purposes, such as uploading them to websites or sharing them on social media platforms. However, I've noticed that when I resize images using basic image editing software or online tools, the quality often suffers with blurry or pixelated images.
Is there any reliable method or software that can help me resize images without losing quality. I want to maintain the sharpness, clarity, and details of the original image, even after resizing it to a smaller or larger size.
Now, click on the "Resize and skew" icon in the toolbar. You can choose to resize by percentage or specify exact pixel dimensions. Finally, click "File" > "Save as" to save the resized image under a new name or location, preserving the original file.
I vote for IrfanView. I've used IrfanView for years to resize an images without losing quality, and it's never let me down. The software is incredibly reliable and produces high-quality results every time.
In conclusion, if you're looking for a fast, efficient, and easy-to-use image editing software that can resize images without losing quality, IrfanView is the perfect choice. Trust me, you won't be disappointed!
The SystemData and each of the folders below a protected with NTFS permissions that restrict even Administrative users from accessing them. To work around this do the following logged in with Administrative rights:
Git is a CLI that adds Unix based commands to windows. What I mostly use it for is the ability to bypass almost all of windows pointless coddling. The Unix style commands are just a perk. Anyway, if you choose to install git, launch it as an administrator.Then type in:
That will copy all of the previous and current lock screen photos from all users on the computer to your pictures in the public folder. From there you can go to C:\Users\Public\Pictures\ in the standard windows File Explorer and be able to access them in a GUI friendly way.
It would be extremely helpful if I could place the bitmap in question as overlay on top of the drawing canvas, set its opacity to 50% and then just use the tools of the software I use to replicate the shapes I need. Unfortunately in many cases the software I use doesn't provide ability to put overlays (or use a simple single low-res .jpg as overlay) In this case an external program to display the "overlay" on top of the canvas would be helpful - just drag the image display window over the editor, set the scale right, and edit away! (providing clicking over the image sends the click to the editor, not to the image viewer!)
Example: the newspaper published an infographics with the map of a planned new city car route in my city. I'd like to add it to OpenStreetMap, but the provided map is sketchy at best, denoting a few streets and keeping general proportions but no finer details. I'd be able to overlay it and scale to match street layout, then just draw the route where it's shown on the plan. Unfortunately, OSM editor allows only tileset server for overlays - no simple local file bitmaps.
Note these apply just to the image displayed. What happens to the UI/window/whatever of the viewer application when a different application is focused is irrelevant. I'm open for both free and commercial solutions, Windows preferred but Linux acceptable too.
It allows you to have a window that is always-on-top. Although it does not let you directly select an image file, you can open the image that you want to work on in any image display program, select that window, and then select the subregion of the window/image that you want shown.
You can then set the opacity to multiples of 25% (Right Click -> Opacity), position the window wherever you want on your screen, then enable click through (Right Click -> Advanced -> Enable Click-Through). You can also scale the window however you like when setting up the capture, as well as save the region of the window you are working on as a "Template" of sorts for other images later.
I searched for a similar software solution to the OP's intention a while back, and found this thread...I tried one or two of the suggestions... I can't remember which. It's besides the point I came to make anyway...
It's called PureRef... it allows for images to be placed on top of any other program you happen to be using...It also allows for transparency... and even better again... it allows for you to set the "click-through" feature. Which means that PureRef will not capture mouse events.
There is a list of other image transparency utilities on AlternativeTo.net. The list will appear if you search for e.g. CThruView, Image Overlay Utility, or Osiva. The problem is that at present most of the free apps (including these just mentioned) are discontinued - only OnTopReplica seems to be current (or was in 2018). This latter isn't ideal because it cannot rotate images (since it works by a different principle), and it is clumsy in how it turns 'click-through' on and off. But for now, it's the only real 'freeware' choice.
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