Bartpe Iso Windows 10

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Kusi Bertoldo

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Aug 4, 2024, 8:22:24 PM8/4/24
to motermautsik
iaccidentally edited the boot.ini file..when i reboot my laptop it just wont boot.with error:windows couldnt start because of hardware configuration error.

so i need a windows xp recovery cd?or just use knoppix to boot into my harddisk?


I need to create a Windows live CD. Is there any way I can create a light weight Windows (any version) live CD through which I can just get the basic windows explorer. The purpose is just to copy important files from/to a crashed system quickly. I encounter scenarios like this often and it usually takes a lot of time booting live Linux CDs. Any ideas would be very helpful.


I was listening to Pauldotcom 115 when Larry or Paul were talking about their key chain. One of them said they wished they could have Winternal's ERD Commander boot from a USB flash drive, well you can have something very similar. Bart's PE Builder lets you run a striped down version of XP off of a CD/DVD or USB flash drive. I use the Ultimate Boot CD for Windows ( ) version since it comes preloaded with tons of useful plugins and drivers. One of them is Sala's Password Renew that lets you reset passwords in much the same what as ERD did (but Sala's tool does not have to to use hash insertion which can sometimes mess up your box). Other plugins include malware removal, network tools and disk utilities. I also have plugins on my website for getting Cain to run off of it.



The utility I use to put UBCD4Win on a UFD is called ubcd4winToUSB, which comes with the Ultimate Boot CD for Windows distribution and can be found in C:\UBCD4Win\plugin\!Critical\ubcd4winToUSB . It does not seem to work in Vista, so do your build from a Windows XP SP2/SP3 box. After installing it to my 4GB thumbdrive it kept giving me a BSOD (Blue Screen of Death) with the error code 0x0000007B whenever I tried to boot it. I found someone provided a patched version ofntdetect.com ( -Blue-Screen-Error-During-Text-t112630.html&p=738009#entry738009 ) that solved my problem and now it boots fine on all my boxes. By the way, I use the Super Talent Pico_C 4GB ( =N82E16820609295) since it's so small and easy to fit in my pocket.



Here are some other useful links for you:

=videos/barts-pe-builder-intro

=security/pebuilder

=videos/backtrack-bartpe-dual-boot




BartPE enables you to create a self-contained version of Windows on CD/DVD that runs "live" from the CDROM. It includes full network support and read/write access to NTFS volumes, which is great for diagnostic or troubleshooting purposes. It also includes a good number of built-in apps, and many more can be added via the plugin mechanism.



Note: You need the original Windows Installation CDROM in order to build the "live" CD.


one should note.. E-machines, and i believe others dont give out the original windows disks they give only restore disks only for e-machines computer, so those wont work with bartPE, because i've tried.. damn e-machines. craputors alright.


Great Program, everyone should have a CD that boots to XP. Especially for emergencies. Your "original Windows Installation CDROM" NEEDS to have Service Pack 2.



3D Tools? This is more files/folders or at least misc/other. It's an O/S program, not graphics.


It's so difficult to find *any* driver for a Windows version newer than Windows 98 (means XP, Vista, Windows 7 etc.).

I've seen there was a Driver for Windows NT 4.0 (see attached file sd_nt4e.zip), but naturally the setup.exe does NOT run on Windows 7 x64 for example.

And unfortunately there is no ".INF" file for the driver files (MKEATAPI.SYS and MKEFPD.SYS), just a setup with a "INI.TXT", which is a bit similar to the searched .INF file, but not recognized for driver installation by the device manager in Windows 7.

I tried the NT 4.0 drivers because the Windows 95/98 drivers are far, far away to be usable for Windows XP or above, but the NT 4.0 drivers (or better Windows 2000 drivers) would be really recognized for a driver installation.

I've also found a 4.5MByte setup archive for Windows XP 32bit, but for sure it does NOT work with Windows 7 x64, too. I can upload this setup also, but I need to use it for x64 Windows ?


The LS-120 drive is also usable with Windows 7 x64 as a 1.44MB floppy drive (if a floppy disk was inserted at boot-time), but the "Eject" function is missing and you can ONLY use 1.44MB floppy disks, NOT any LS-120 media.


I highly doubt that there even is any 64bit driver for the LS120. The LS120 was long dead commercially when 64bit windows came to market and XP 64 in particular had rerally dire driver support for even common hardware. 32 bit XP has a build in driver I believe, but that is as high as it goes for support. On anything newer it is at best a glorified floppy drive.


The one I use on this PC is a compaq multibay IDE > USB 2.0 converter with an LKM FC33 (Slim LS120) drive in it - with that, I've got the eject option and my LS120 disks read & write just fine. It's seeing it as Floppy (B:) because there's another USB floppy taking up A:.

You're sure the drive is okay? Perhaps try without the parallel adapter?


Iirc, some of the internal models were discontinued from 2k onward and the last version of Windows that still had internal drivers for these drives, was the beta3 version of Windows 2k (could be wrong though, it's been a while since I last messed with these drives).


But in my PC a Matsushia LS-120 drive connected to an ATAPI Controller (ITE8211 based PCI card) is shown *only* as a floppy drive with 1.44MB capacity. The drive is working fine with 1.44MB disks, but I don't have PC formatted LS-120 media to test them, too. But for sure I can't format Macintosh preformatted 120MB disks in my PC, because the format option for higher capacity is not offered.

May be you can use it also with media which are preformatted PC 120MB disks and the 120MB will show up as capacity if such a media is inserted (which I don't have).

Are you really sure you can format the 120MB media in your Win7 PC ????

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