WinToHDD 7.0.2.2 by Razvan Serea
WinToHDD is a handy and useful software which allows you to install or reinstall Windows (Vista/2008 or later) without using a CD/DVD/USB drive. With this All-in-One Microsoft Windows deployment tool, you can easily reinstall Windows, install Windows onto disks other than the one where your Windows is installed, or clone existing Windows installation to other disk. Furthermore, you can use it to create a Windows installation USB containing all your Windows installation ISO files, then you can install Windows (Vista/2008 or later) from the same USB drive on both BIOS and UEFI computers.
WinToHDD features:
Install/reinstall Windows from ISO, WIM, ESD without using CD/DVD/USB.Improved
Clone Windows to another disk without reinstalling Windows, apps.Improved
Easily bypass Windows 11 system requirements (TPM 2.0, RAM, internet connection, etc).Improved
Encrypt Windows partition with BitLocker when installing or cloning.
Install any version of Windows 11/10/8/7/Vista, Server 2008 or later (64 & 32 bits) from same USB drive on both BIOS and UEFI computers.
Fully compatible with GPT and UEFI.
Note: WinToHDD 7.0.2.2 changelog is not yet available.
Download: WinToHDD 7.0.2.2 | 36.6 MB (Freemium)
Links: Home Page | Free vs Pro Comparison | Screenshot
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Hello,
Version 19 of ESET's consumer offerings are 64-bit only. The 32-bit installers are for Version 18, which were announced in this Neowin article.
In addition to ESET NOD32 Antivirus, ESET Internet Security, ESET Smart Security Premium, and ESET Security Ultimate, both ESET Safe Server and ESET Small Business Security v19.1.14.0 have been released as well.
Direct download links:
ESET Safe Server (x64) | ESET Safe Server (ARM64)
ESET Small Business Security (x64) | ESET Small Business Security (ARM64)
Regards,
Aryeh Goretsky
I can name 10x that on why not to switch....
It's funny outlook/office are going towards web app wrappers, and then MS is now preaching native apps again.... ugh can we just pick a lane and stay in it
Absolutely NOBODY has suggested such a conclusion.
I am affirming the sober reality check that AV2's overall market adoption will take longer than AV1's adoption rate -- which, by the way, is the whole point of the article!
While PCI-SIG is productive (on paper), other WGs have created all sorts of confusing progress plans that consumers have tuned-out of their improvements... HTML/W3C, USB, HDMI, BT, WIFI (ieee802.11) as a few other groups where spec naming conventions, split progress paths, overlapping ambitions...
I'm not critiquing the AV specs group; I'm simply affirming that adoption for AV2 faces headwinds beyond the macroeconomics of it all.
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