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Step1: Run MultibootISO, install MultibootISO into your USB Storage Device (ie.pendrive, External Hard Disk). This will install Grub4dos in pendrive. Step 2: Copy everything in Windows 7 Installation DVD into your USB storage. Step 3: Look for the file your pendrive/External Hard Disk, edit it with Notepad++.
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CaraInstal Ulang Windows XP. Kadang-kadang file sistem bisa mengalami kerusakan, dan Anda akan mencoba bekerja dengan sistem operasi windows XP yang hampir tidak bisa berfungsi. Mungkin semua program Anda mulai berjalan dengan lambat, dan Anda berharap ada cara untuk membuat sistem operasi windows berjalan cepat seperti sebelumnya.
4 Pilih opsi "ISO Image" dari menu drop-down di sebelah opsi "Buat disk bootable menggunakan" . Selanjutnya, klik "ikon disk" dan telusuri file gambar Windows ISO yang akan Anda gunakan untuk membuat Windows To Go Bootable USB. 5. Selanjutnya, pastikan bahwa opsi "Windows To Go" telah dipilih. Setelah Anda selesai dengan semua hal, ketuk
Downloaddan install PDAnet di PC atau Laptop yang menggunakan sistem operasi Windows 10 /8.1 / 7 / Vista / XP. Pada saat proses installing USB driver akan sedikit lama sekitar 3 sampai 5 menit. Kalau muncul notiifkasi âAn existing Android USB drivers is found on your computer. you can reinstall it if has problem.â.
CPlnv6O. For a long time, Microsoft didnât sell Windows install media in the form of bootable USB flash drives. Instead, it prefered to stick to old-school DVD media, despite the fact that many notebooks today are too small to even include an optical drive, and many DIYers are building PCs which forego one on purpose. However, things have moved on, and for the first time, Microsoft has begun to sell Windows 10 on pre-configured USB drives. Previous versions of the OS XP, 7 and all require the user to create their own bootable USB drive. Creating a bootable Windows USB drive used to be a chore, but today, one solution can pretty-well suit most people. However, there are times when a flash drive has some quirk that prevents it from working with a particular solution, so for that reason, this article takes a look at five different methods. Guide Index USB Installer Tools & Successes Acquiring a Disc Image ISO Method 1 â Using Rufus Method 2 â UNetbootin Method 3 â Using Microsoft diskpart Method 4 â Microsoft Windows 7 USB/DVD Tool Method 5 â Windows 10 Media Creation Tool Windows XP Notes Common Problems Benefits of USB Install Media Even if the target desktop or notebook has an optical drive, there are a couple of reasons to consider first creating a USB-based installer. Admittedly, the time and effort of creating the drive might make it best-suited for system builders, but for people like us, who juggle test machines, USB is a no-brainer. To start, USB media is more durable than disc-based media. Discs can be easily scratched, while well-built USB flash drives can generally handle a bit of abuse. Then, thereâs the convenience. Ever walk around with a disc in your pocket? It looks a bit odd. For us, performance and reliability are the key reasons why weâve opted to use USB-based installers in lieu of discs, especially with USB being much more common. Even if a DVD has been burned at the highest commercial speeds, it wonât be able to compete with flash memory which offers far improved IOPS performance operations per second â itâs the same reason why SSDs are much faster for booting an OS and loading applications than a mechanical hard drive; the seek times are minuscule in comparison. While itâs beyond the scope of this article, those who truly want a fast install experience can slipstream USB support into the install media, which on current chipsets and an SSD target can allow you to install Windows in under 4 minutes flat. USB Installer Tools & Successes Over the course of this article, weâre going to be looking at five different solutions that accomplish the exact same thing Creating a USB-based Windows installer; if one doesnât work, the next one should at least, thatâs the hope. To give an overview of what to expect from each solution, refer to this success table Windows 10 Windows 8 Windows 7 Windows XP Rufus Yes* Yes Yes Yes UNetbootin Yes Yes Yes No diskpart Yes Yes Yes No Microsoft USB Tool Yes Yes Yes No Media Creation Tool Yes No No No * Requires Rufus or later. Given the fact that Windows XP has reached end-of-life status and doesnât officially support installation over USB, we have to outline a number of problems and conditions in order to get it working. Windows XP over USB is still temperamental, and there is a good chance that it just wonât work with your system, so please keep this in mind. For starters, modern UEFI-equipped machines are not designed to support such an old OS, so chances are that it will not even install, or even be detected in the first place. If the motherboard in question happens to support a legacy BIOS mode, then it might work. Different version of Rufus explained later have better luck with the XP process than others. We strongly suggest you skip to the dedicated part of this article that explains the problems with Windows XP and USB support. What about Windows Vista? Like Windows 7, 8, and 10, Vista too can be installed from USB media with these same methods, but due to that fact that most have moved on from it in favor of 10, itâs not a big focus. We mentioned Rufus above, and thatâs the tool weâre going to lead in here with, as we consider it to be the simplest to use, and the most effective. We discussed the same tool in an article from summer 2012 called Creating a Bootable DOS Flash Drive the Easy Way, as it allows for simple creation of bootable MS-DOS flash drives, as the title suggests. After the look at Rufus, weâll continue on to UNetbootin, Microsoftâs diskpart a tool built into Windows, a quick mention of another official Microsoft tool, but one the company no longer promotes for Windows 7 and 8, as well as the latest method, the Media Creation Tool. But first⊠Acquiring a Disc Image ISO Some solutions listed on this page require a Windows disc image .iso to be present. The exception is diskpartâ, as the discâs files will need to be transferred over manually it doesnât matter if they come from a mounted ISO or a drive in an actual DVD-ROM. ISOs are available from a number of sources, but most people will acquire them after purchasing the OS online through Microsoft, or through some other related Microsoft service. If you donât have an ISO, or a disc for that matter, youâll need to acquire one from a friend or elsewhere on the web. If youâre just looking to download Windows 10 as an ISO, you simply need to run the tool listed in step 5, and choose to save as ISO rather than to burn the image to a flash drive. Note that we canât really provide an MD5 for a Windows 10 ISO, as it changes every time itâs downloaded through Microsoftâs tool. Only the ISOs directly supplied by Microsoft would have static hashes. There are multiple editions of any given Windows version, but weâre going to list the exact ISOs we used along with their MD5 checksums in case they prove useful. MD5 Checksums Windows XP Pro Service Pack 3 F424A52153E6E5ED4C0D44235CF545D5 Windows 7 Ultimate Service Pack 1 56A26636EC667799F5A7F42F142C772D Windows 8 Pro 0E8F2199FAE18FE510C23426E68F675A Windows MSDN; multi-version CDADC5A76634651770A365F457702803 Please be careful where you source your OS image from, as most online sources will be pirated copies and/or bundled with extra sometimes malicious software. How the image was captured as well will have an effect on how the final boot drive turns out, so stick to official sources where possible. For those who have a Windows setup DVD, a free tool like CDBurnerXP or ImgBurn can be used to rip it into an .iso file. Other tools exist that accomplish the same thing, but these are the only ones we can personally recommend. For mounting an ISO image, weâd recommend Virtual CloneDrive, as itâs free, and not the âfree but a total nagâ kind of free. NOTE Some anti-virus applications might interfere with the USB creation process due to the autorun properties involved, so if issues are experienced, weâd recommend temporarily disabling the anti-virus until the process is complete. Using Rufus Both Rufus and UNetbootin are simple tools for this task, and outside of Rufusâ Windows XP support, both work just the same. However, we prefer Rufus because we find it loads a lot quicker, and feels a bit faster, too. For a great many reasons, this is still our preferred method of creating USB boot drives. With Rufus loaded up, choose the appropriate device that you want to turn into a boot drive, under the âDeviceâ menu, and make sure that the file system is NTFS not FAT32. The other options shouldnât matter too much, although if youâre planning to install Windows 8 as an official EFI OS, you may wish to peruse the options under the âPartition scheme and target system typeâ menu. For Windows XP, select MBR Partition only. To load the Windows .iso file, the small CD icon to the right of âCreate a bootable disk usingâ option can be clicked. After perusing the file manager for the ISO image and accepting it, the âStartâ button can be clicked to have the tool work its magic. NOTE As the program will state, doing this will erase all data off of the flash drive â so backup first. If you have any issues, be sure to check out our Common Problems section below. Using UNetbootin UNetbootin is a well-known tool as itâs become a de facto choice for turning a bootable Linux live CD into a bootable Linux live flash drive â for that purpose, it still excels. Little do most people realize, it can handle Windows ISOs as well but as the table at the top of this page shows, it doesnât support creating a bootable Windows XP drive. Like with Rufus, the appropriate drive should be selected from the âDriveâ menu at the bottom, and then the ââŠâ button to the right of the largest text field can be clicked to search for and accept the required ISO. At this point, the âOKâ can be clicked, and the process will get underway. Unlike Rufus, UNetbootin doesnât erase the flash drive first, so data remains intact â however, if youâre repeatedly writing new ISOs to the drive using the tool, itâs recommended you format after each one, so as to not leave unused scrap files around the drive. NOTE Weâd still recommend backing up personal data before writing an ISO to it just in case. Using Microsoft diskpart For those who donât have an ISO, but rather a DVD, diskpart is the solution for you. It does require some command-line usage, but as youâll see, itâs not too complicated. NOTE This method will delete the entire flash drive, so be sure to back up personal data first. To make proper use of diskpart, youâll need to open a command prompt with administrator rights head to âStartâ, type in cmdâ, right-click it, and choose Open as Administratorâ. Once the prompt is opened, type in diskpartâ to load the tool, and then list diskâ to figure out which relates to your flash drive. External storage should appear at the end of the list, and in our case, it did weâre using a 32GB flash drive, which appears here as 29GB. Once the appropriate drive is figured-out, it can be chosen using the select disk â command. Once selected, it needs to be wiped clean, have a partition created, and then be formatted. The entire command process is summed-up in this block list disk â shows available disks, look carefully for the one that looks like your flash drive select disk â change to the disk flash drive you wish to use clean â removes existing partions create partition primary select partition 1 active format fs=ntfs quick assign exit For those who might want to see this in action, we provide this screenshot Note that âquickâ can be removed off of the format command to run a full format, but that might take minutes to tens of minutes depending on the drive as itâs more thorough. At this point, the Windows setup DVD can be inserted into the drive, or the ISO mounted, and its files copied over to the root folder of the flash drive. After the process is done, opening up the flash drive in the file manager should mirror the contents of the Windows DVD/ISO. Using Microsoft Windows 7 USB/DVD Tool After the Windows 7 launch, Microsoft released its own USB creator tool that supported its official ISOs. While the company no longer promotes the tool, it supports at least 7 and 8 just fine, so some might prefer to use it over the other solutions. Once downloaded and opened, an ISO must be chosen. After that, the âUSB Deviceâ option needs to be clicked this same tool can also burn straight to a DVD. At the last screen, the appropriate flash dive needs to be selected from the menu, and after hitting âBegin copyingâ, the entire process will be complete after just a couple of minutes. Truthfully, Microsoftâs tool here might be the easiest of them all to use, but because the company isnât promoting it in any way, shape, or form note that itâs called the Windows 7 USB/DVD tool, and not Windows 7 & 8 USB/DVD tool, we feel that itâs right to quicker recommend the other often updated solutions first. Using Windows 10 Media Creation Tool If you plan to install Windows 10 on a new system, use it to recover an existing system, or upgrade a previous install of Windows 7 or 8, creating a bootable flash drive is the first step. Windows 10 is the first Microsoft OS that not only natively supports USB installs, but encourages it and even sells USB drives ready-to-go. The process with Windows 10 is not much different from Windows 7 and 8/ like above, but is made simpler by the fact that you donât even need the disk image first, as you can download it directly from Microsoft, complete with all the latest service packs already installed. The whole process for creating a Windows 10 bootable USB drive can be done by using the Media Creation Tool; most systems these days will use the 64-bit version, so grab that. Once youâve downloaded the tool, run it and youâll be presented with the media creation process. The gallery below outlines each step of the process for the basic method. There are a few things you might need to check first. Depending on where you plan to install Windows 10, you need to check which version you require, Home or Pro. NOTE The contents of the USB flash drive will be erased, so make sure you back it up first. Select 'Create installation media for another PC' to begin the process. We'll be creating the bootable USB flash drive with the tool, so select the first option. Select the version of Windows 10 that you require, in this case, we went with Home 64-bit. Choose the USB drive that you wish to turn into the bootable media. Only Flash media will show on the list. The drive will need at least 4GB of free space. NOTE The flash drive will be formatted, so make backups first. Wait for the tool to finish downloading. Depending on your Internet connection, this could be from a few minutes to a few hours. Once the Windows 10 image has downloaded, it will automatically begin creating the boot media on the drive you selected. This can take a few minutes. If everything when according to plan, the Media Creation Tool will declare success and you are ready to use your new Windows 10 bootable USB drive. The version you pick here at the beginning really doesnât matter, since your license key will determine the version you can use, and the OS will change and configure itself based on that key. The N version of each OS type is for the EU compliant version, but truth be told, there isnât anything different about it at this time. You can pick 64-bit as well, or both 32/64-bit if you are unsure or plan on using the bootable flash drive on different systems. The Media Creation Tool can can be used to just download the ISO image of Windows 10, which can then be used with something like Rufus to create the bootable USB drive. This offers the advantage of being able to keep a backup of the ISO image, as well as create multiple boot drives without having to download the image each time. If you run into problems with the Media Creation Tool when it comes to creating the bootable flash drive, you can use the following method. Instead of selecting USB Flash Drive in the Media Creation Tool, just select ISO File instead, choose a location to save the file, and after itâs downloaded, follow the steps outlined in the Rufus guide above. In general, we found this method more reliable than using the Media Creation Tool to create the Windows 10 bootable flash drive, and ther are a number of other advantages to using Rufus as well. NOTE When you let the Media Creation Tool handle the entire process of making the USB boot drive, there is a small problem when dealing with USB drives larger than 32GB. The tool will only create a single partition up to 32GB and then completely ignore the rest of the drive, and Windows-based operating systems can only handle a single partition on USB flash drives. If you create the boot drive with Rufus, itâll use the entire drive, so 64GB and 128GB flash drives will have the full disk space made available. Windows XP Notes If you are attempting to use Windows XP on a USB drive, there are a couple of things to bear in mind. First off, we strongly recommend using Rufus 32-bit version to setup XP on a USB flash drive over the other methods, as its success rate is much better. If installing with Rufus doesnât work the first time, change the partition mode to MBR for BIOS only. Making XP boot over USB is a little tricky as well, because itâs much more sensitive to the age of the hardware and the system you are using it with. As far as we know, the 32-bit ISO image of XP is the only compatible version that can be put on a bootable flash drive success for XP 64-bit was limited. One of the key points though is that you canât use a USB port when installing, even with EHCI mode enabled. We also found that a lot of modern hardware refuses to detect the drive. If you are using an older system, then you should have better luck booting Windows XP from a USB flash drive. Just be sure that your particular motherboard supports booting from USB in the first place itâs normally off by default in older system. Check the BIOS boot section and see if USB drives are supported. Unfortunately, the time period in which motherboards supported USB booting on older hardware is quite short, as anything before didnât have the option, and anything after around the time Windows Vista and 7 took off, those boards started the transition over to UEFI, which XP does not support. A number of systems we have tested this with had very mixed results. Both an older Pentium D system with BIOS, and a i7-2600 with UEFI, couldnât boot into XP. The USB media does work on a couple of laptops, but with other systems, it just boots up into a blank screen. If checking your motherboard settings for USB boot support and even legacy modes do not work, then you will have to resort to using a CD/DVD. You can read below for some more general advice as well. Common Problems No Bootable Device Detected This can be caused by a number of things. The most common is that your system is not setup to detect or boot from USB devices. You will need to go into your BIOS/EFI and check whether your USB drive is detected at all. If it is, make sure that itâs available from the boot menu. If it isnât, then some security option may be enabled that prevents booting from USB devices. As each BIOS/EFI is different, we can not help with specific options, but check various security and boot menus to make sure that USB support is enabled. If everything appears correct, but still canât be detected, try enabling USB legacy support, or a different USB port, such as a USB port instead of USB Itâs also possible that the install media, or ISO image you have, does not have the boot information available. Try a different ISO image if at all possible. Windows Installer Starts But Canât Detect Install Media If the installer starts and lets you pick installation options, but an error occurs that either says it canât detect the DVD or it requests you to insert media with additional drivers, then you need to use a USB port. Windows XP, Vista and 7, do not have native support for USB ports. Attempting to install with your flash drive plugged into a USB port will result in the above error. Unplug your USB Flash Drive and insert it into a USB port, then begin the process again. You may still use a USB Flash drive, but not plugged into a USB port. If no USB ports are available such as with more modern systems, then you will either need to go into the BIOS/EFI and enable forced legacy mode or enable EHCI on the USB ports, or you will need to slipstreamâ the USB drivers into your Windows Install Image. Flash Drive Isnât Using All Available Space This was mentioned previously in the Windows 10 section, but if you are creating a USB boot drive for Windows 10 and your 64GB drive is only showing 32GB available, then you need to recreate your boot drive with Rufus. The Media Creation Tool MCT only supports drives up to 32GB, and anything larger will have a second partition made, which Windows can not detect normally but is still available if you plug it into a Linux machine for example. So download the ISO with MCT, then flash it with Rufus. Windows 10 Something Happenedâ Generic and oh-so-helpful error. If you are using the Media Creation Tool to create the bootable USB flash drive, and itâs failing on the last step, try the alternative and recommended method of using the tool to download the ISO image and then use Rufus to create the boot media. If the Media Creation Tool is failing to download the ISO, then this is likely a network issue with either your local machine or Microsoftâs server. Try using a wired/Ethernet connection instead of wireless, or just wait a while and try again later. Failing that, try to download from a different machine if possible. If you have any questions about any of the steps, please leave a comment below and weâll help you as best we can. Update This article was updated May 2018 by Jamie Fletcher, to include Windows 10 and additional information regarding XP and USB size problems. Originally published December 2013. Support our efforts! 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