Deep Freeze ( http://www.faronics.com/CANADA/product.asp ) is a program that prevents changes to a hard drive. You can do whatever you want to the drive, but when you restart it will return the disk to its original state.
It does this without partitioning, taking up extra space, or having another hard drive to image across. Anyone have any ideas or theories on how it works? I'm going to install the trial and see what I can find out.
It’s amusing how Microsoft is pushing IT admins as if this was a major, game-changing update. In reality, it’s just an enablement package that bumps the build number, which is disappointing compared to the more substantial 22H2 and 24H2 releases. Technically, 25H2, 26H1, and the upcoming 26H2 are essentially the same, differing only in support schedules. They could have included the Windows K2 improvements here, but chose not to.
The era of Windows being in the backburner continues, and this 26H2 release feels like an afterthought. Shame, Nadella, shame.
After I installed those, my older but capable Win 11 laptop (16GB RAM) reported it as 26H2 26300.8697.
Then I installed it on my big laptop (128GB RAM! Hehe sorry), it reported it as 25H2 26220.8690. Ugh. Do I have to switch Insiders channels from Release to Beta?
Question
Post-It Note
Deep Freeze ( http://www.faronics.com/CANADA/product.asp ) is a program that prevents changes to a hard drive. You can do whatever you want to the drive, but when you restart it will return the disk to its original state.
It does this without partitioning, taking up extra space, or having another hard drive to image across. Anyone have any ideas or theories on how it works? I'm going to install the trial and see what I can find out.
Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/214696-how-does-deep-freeze-work/Share on other sites
47 answers to this question
Recommended Posts