Windows Xp Live Boot Usb Download

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Rancul Ratha

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Jun 15, 2024, 4:04:36 AM6/15/24
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There is great functionality in having a fully working version of Windows that you could boot from any computer on something as small as a USB flash drive (Windows Live USB), and today we will show you how to do it. All you need is a 16GB (recommended 32GB+) flash drive and a license to activate Windows on the USB.

Pros: Cross-platform. Has been around for a long time and is quite reliable.
Cons: Interface is a bit dated. Primarily designed for Linux distributions, but can work with Windows ISOs.
Website: UNetbootin

windows xp live boot usb download


Download https://t.co/FhAYspY3d8



Pros: Allows for the creation of multiboot USBs, meaning you can have multiple operating systems on a single USB drive.
Cons: Interface is not as intuitive as some other tools. Windows-only.
Website: YUMI


When choosing a tool, consider your needs (e.g., do you need a multiboot USB? Do you want a tool that's cross-platform?) and your level of expertise. For most users, Rufus or the Windows USB/DVD Download Tool will suffice. For more advanced users or specific needs, one of the other tools might be more appropriate.

Ever since I learned that I could simply put any distro live cd and copy every single file in a HD I have been sort of worried, is there any way that disable it in windows? I know that in linux one can "Set a password for grub, so one can't modify boot entry" and that I could set an encryption as well.

in windows I believe you can not. Alternative is if you encrypt (bitlocker or similiar)But encrypting does not stop livecd booting, but the livecd will not be able to access your partition/hd. TrueCrypt is a nice open source project that has pre-boot authentication and full disk encryption.

If your BIOS supports it, you can disable booting from CD/DVD and/or USB. That will prevent most people from being able to boot a LiveCD. Also, enabling a BIOS password would help prevent them from changing those settings. However, this is not a fail-proof method, as BIOS passwords can be circumvented by removing the battery for a period of time, or be shorting certain jumpers on the motherboard.

In addition to that, if someone has access to boot off a liveCD, they have physical access to your PC. They can open up the computer and boot off a different disk hard disk. Or they can just take your hard drive.

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Hello, Is the following possible? I want to boot and run Windows from USB, including installing apps and keeping setting etc persistent across sessions. Essentially I want to use an existing machine without its internal hard drive (which has Windows installed but for which I don't have admin access) with an external one instead that will have a new Windows installation separate from the existing one. The existing Windows installation is restricted and the hard drive is protected with bitlocker. I want to leave that intact, and most of the time the machine will use this installation. But I want to be able to boot into another drive and have a completely separate installation. I have been able to boot from a USB stick with win10 install disk, but I can't install Windows in the existing hard drive because of the bitlocker protection (and I would prefer to keep it separate anyway). If I insert an external hard drive in another USB port, windows refuses to install there, saying it requires an internal hard drive. Is there a way to overcome this requirement?

One more comment regarding spinning HDD vs SSD. Some people commented that they would perform the same as the bottleneck would be the USB port. I thought that made sense but it proved wrong in practice. I loaded the exact same VHD file with a Windows 10 installation on two different drives one HDD and one SSD. The SSD takes about half the time to boot (same PC, same USB port). Also I tried running Fortnite, the HDD was unable to run it, the SSD managed. I guess the reason may be that the sequential read/write throughput ends up being the same as the USB is the bottleneck, but there's enough difference from random access read/write to give the SSD a big advantage even if connected via USB.

Creating a live USB allows users to carry their operating system with them. Therefore, the user can operate the system normally on this bootable USB drive and can make changes to the bootable operating system. This article will give you a detailed introduction about how to create a Windows 10 live USB and run it easily, please read on.

A live USB is a bootable USB flash drive or external hard disk drive that contains a full operating system. They're the next evolutionary step after live CDs, but they have the extra benefit of writable storage, allowing changes to the booted operating system. Live USB can be used in embedded systems for system administration, data recovery, or test driving, and can persistently save settings and install software packages on the USB device.

Therefore, you can use any software you want and access all the data at any time. After cloning, you can boot your system directly from the USB successfully. During the process, you only need to use one software and the steps are very easy.

Answer: They're similar, but not exactly the same. A bootable USB can start up a computer, but a live USB goes further by running a full operating system, like Windows 10, directly from the USB drive. So, all live USBs are bootable, but not all bootable USBs are live USBs.

I consider you have mastered how to create Windows 10 live USB and run it in three different ways. In fact, the third method is more useful and friendly for most users, because disk clone will clone everything including system, applications, data, etc. And it helps you to achieve a secure boot after cloning. Furthermore, it can clone all the partitions and adjust them by yourself.

currently my windows isn't booting so I need a Windows installation to fix it, but I don't have any pc to make one, so I'm using a software on my phone to turn the phone into bootable usb but it doesn't work with normal iso only hybrid ones like Linux, so I thought of using live Ubuntu to download the Windows iso and burn it to the USB, is this possible and how to do it, and what's the best Ubuntu version for it.

Well, in my case when my Windows 10 computer crashed while I had Windows Live Mail 2012 open, Windows Live Mail 2012 would no longer boot-up, period. It would simply state Windows Live Mail 2012 stopped working and leave me no choice but to close the app. I tried uninstalling, rebooting, reinstalling and it made absolutely no difference - error message every time.

The keys to decrypt your hard drive are stored in the TPM chip on your motherboard, so you would need to live-boot on the same motherboard, and your live-boot OS would need to convince the TPM to release the keys.

In February 2008, a group of security researchers published details of a so-called "cold boot attack" that allows full disk encryption systems such as BitLocker to be compromised by booting the machine off removable media, such as a USB drive, into another operating system, then dumping the contents of pre-boot memory.[34]

So it seems that it's not as simple as just booting into Linux and reading the drive, but if an expert hacker has access to your computer while its running and logged into the decrypted drive, then it's possible to reboot into linux quickly enough that RAM still has the old data on it pluck the decryption key directly out of memory, this bypassing the TPM entirely. For more info on this attack, see: wikipedia/Cold_boot_attack.

As @AndréBorie points out in comments, if you're willing to do some electrical engineering and sniff the connection between the TPM and the rest of the motherboard, then you can boot the system normally and read the decryption key off the wire.

Some us remember a time when every operating system booted off of a floppy disk. However, for decades now, almost every computer stores its OS on an internal drive such as a hard drive or SSD. But what if you just want to try out Windows 11 on your computer, without actually installing it? Enter Live11, which has just been made available for download, and runs Windows 11 Pro, without writing a single file to disk.

Live11 is a new lightweight Windows 11 live disk from NTDEV, the developer behind Tiny11. After downloading the image that NTDEV has posted to the Internet Archive, you can write to a USB Flash Drive, a microSD card or even, if you still have an optical drive, a DVD-R. In fact, NTDEV deliberately got the disk image down to 4.4GB, which fits within a DVD's 4.7GB capacity.

Live disks, also known as live DVDs or live CDs, have been common in the Linux world for a while, where they have been used to let users try out a Linux flavor before deciding whether or not they want to install it. However, running a Windows 11 live disk is more interesting than useful.

To see what Live11 is like, I downloaded the ISO and booted it in a virtual machine, using VMWare Workstation 16. According to NTDEV, you can run Live11 in a variety of virtual machines or boot a whole computer from it, but it won't run on Oracle VirtualBox. It requires no disk space at all, but you will need at least 8GB of RAM. You do not need TPM or a Microsoft account, both of which are normally Windows 11 system requirements.

Live11 then makes you go through a somewhat shortened version of the Windows 11 installation process every single time you boot it. It first asks you which country you're in, which keyboard you want and then which privacy settings you wish to turn on. It then checks for updates and makes you wait a minute or two while it "installs." NTDEV told us that they deliberately made the installation questions part of the boot process so that users would know that this is an unmodified version of Windows 11.

There are only a few apps preloaded, including Notepad, Paint, the Snipping Tool and the Terminal. Microsoft Edge is not installed, but you can run a Portable version of Mozilla Firefox if you open it from the live disk. It's a shame that there's no browser preloaded as it's annoying to have to navigate to the disk to find the executable for Firefox and, every time you open it, it wants to ask you some installation questions such as whether you want to pin it to taskbar. You can ignore these prompts and just start browsing.

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