Recommended Posts

Alright, so I have a new, high speed. USB Flash Drive. OCZ ATV 4 Gig flash drive.

http://kurtsh.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!...!1665.entry

This guy from microsoft has in his post the way to do it.

I didn't format it, since it already is.

I did this however

3. Copy Windows Vista's DVD ROM content to the Flash Drive

Simply issue the following command to start copying all the content from the Windows Vista DVD to your newly formatted high speed flash drive.

* xcopy d:\*.* /s/e/f e:\ (changed it to my drives)

And that's it. Boot up the machine, have it boot off the USB drive, and watch how fast the installation completes. If you thought Windows Vista installed quickly before then let's see how you like it now. The slowest part of the install will probably be the computer waiting for you to type in information in the setup fields

I go to boot off the USB device only to have it say "No operating system" Am I missing something here?

What could I have missed or need to do?

Edit: found on another site it says this MUST be down on a computer currently running vista because you have to do a diskpart and XP wont do anything with it, but within vista it will.

Edited by Dane
Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/679716-installing-vista-from-usb-device/
Share on other sites

At least you got it working? ;)

It is huge amounts faster than a DVD ^^

I haven't install vista yet. I don't currently have vista installed to make the drive work. I might go over to my friends house either today or tomorrow they have vista running, so i could take my dvd with and make it there.

That should work I think, otherwise I could install vista first make it and find out if it works lol

It's okay people! I've found a way to get round the problem. I basically installed Windows Server 2008 on a VM using VirtualBox and have done it that way! Hehe! :D

I didn't think of that. I could use vista in virtual pc, not enter my key install it. make the drive in there. i think i can do that anyways.

Good luck!

Actually is that even possible to use a USB flash drive in virtual pc?

Edited by Dane
I didn't think of that. I could use vista in virtual pc, not enter my key install it. make the drive in there. i think i can do that anyways.

Good luck!

Actually is that even possible to use a USB flash drive in virtual pc?

Basically what I did was this:

Opened up the device manager in Windows XP, went to Disk Management, deleted the current partition on the USB Flash (was NTFS).

I then went on to format the drive to 'Fat32' then I started up a Virtual VM using VirtualBox.

Once Windows 2008 was loaded, I told VB told to open use the Flash Drive and Windows 2008 detected it within Windows as a proper USB storage device.

I then went into the device manager (I'm not sure if you can do this on Windows XP, but I thought I would leave half of the instructions in the first post's url for Windows 2008) and set the partition to 'Active' on the USB flash storage.

I then opened up the Command prompt using Administrator priviliages and executed the 'xcopy' command which was explained in the first post.

The files then copied from the DVD/(ISO I used which was mounted via VB).

After the files were completed, I hit the 'Safely remove hardware' function from within Windows 2008, then told VB to disconnect the USB Flash storage from the VM, this caused the USB Flash Storage to reload from in Windows XP (Because, in VB, it removes the Flash Storage from Windows XP to stop any possible conflicts with the VM).

I checked the Flash Storage to find that all the files were loaded onto the device. I haven't yet tested this with restarting the computer since I'm downloading something big at the moment, but I'm quite positive that this method worked since all the files loaded properly from within Windows.

I followed this http://www.maximumpcguides.com/create-a-bo...-windows-vista/ and for the copying I used http://kurtsh.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!...!1665.entry and for me the install worked fine, installed Vista Ultimate on my brothers PC in 12mins compared to 20mins on DVD

I followed this http://www.maximumpcguides.com/create-a-bo...-windows-vista/ and for the copying I used http://kurtsh.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!...!1665.entry and for me the install worked fine, installed Vista Ultimate on my brothers PC in 12mins compared to 20mins on DVD

I was always told never to format a flash drive anything else but FAT 32, does it cause problems as anything else?

Would you mind telling us which tools can do this please?

Well, I've made a lots of bootable SD-cards and USB sticks and the tool that has worked the best for me has to be "PeToUSB":

http://gocoding.com/page.php?al=petousb

Of course this will only enable the drive to be "bootable" you'll need software that can be booted from as well for it to be useful.

I followed this http://www.maximumpcguides.com/create-a-bo...-windows-vista/ and for the copying I used http://kurtsh.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!...!1665.entry and for me the install worked fine, installed Vista Ultimate on my brothers PC in 12mins compared to 20mins on DVD

Nice... My install times are below:

DVD: 22 min(s)

USB: 8 min(s)

The easiest way to do this if you already have a Vista DVD is to first boot into the DVD > Repair my computer > command prompt. Plug in the USB thumb drive and use Diskpart to make it bootable:

diskpart

list disk

(find the number that corresponds to the flash drive)

select disk x

select partition 1

(assuming you already have one partition formatted on the drive)

active

exit

Then, you can use the xcopy command in the first post.

I thought that XP should be able to make any mass storage device bootable. You need to go into the Disk Management MMC snap-in: run compmgmt.msc, and select disk management. Right click on the partition and you should be able to select Active.

Nice... My install times are below:

DVD: 22 min(s)

USB: 8 min(s)

Nice!

I haven't got anywhere where vista is install to make my usb.

So I could just do an Upgrade over XP to vista if it lets me. Then just wait to it boots make the USB and then reinstall that way.

i got a pm from a member saying that if you get an error after you install it and it boots just take out the usb flash drive and put it back in and it should work.

Anyone run into this problem?

I thought that XP should be able to make any mass storage device bootable. You need to go into the Disk Management MMC snap-in: run compmgmt.msc, and select disk management. Right click on the partition and you should be able to select Active.

The thing is, it refuses to mark a usb flash drive as active. It's got not problems with an external hdd connected over usb though...

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • The possibility that milk gathers back into a glass implies that gravity can be 'reversed'.
    • VidCoder 12.20 by Razvan Serea  VidCoder is a DVD/Blu-ray ripping and video transcoding application for Windows. It uses HandBrake as its encoding engine. Calling directly into the HandBrake library gives it a more rich UI than the official HandBrake Windows GUI. VidCoder can rip DVDs but does not defeat the CSS encryption found in most commercial DVDs. You’ll need the NET 8 Desktop Runtime. If you don’t have it, VidCoder will prompt you to download and install it. The Portable version is self-contained and does not require any .NET Runtime to be installed. You do not need to install HandBrake for VidCoder to work. Feature list: Multi-threaded MP4, MKV containers Completely integrated encoding pipeline: everything is in one process and no huge intermediate temporary files H.264, H.265, MPEG-4, MPEG-2, VP8, Theora video Hardware-accelerated encoding with AMD VCE, Nvidia NVENC and Intel QuickSync AAC, MP3, Vorbis, AC3, FLAC audio encoding and AAC/AC3/MP3/DTS/DTS-HD passthrough Target bitrate, size or quality for video 2-pass encoding Decomb, detelecine, deinterlace, rotate, reflect, chroma smooth, colorspace filters Powerful batch encoding with simultaneous encodes Customizable Pickers to automatically pick audio and subtitle tracks, destination, titles and more Instant source previews Creates small encoded preview clips Pause, resume encoding VidCoder 12.20 changes: Updated HandBrake core to 1.11.2. Download: VidCoder 12.20 | 47.0 MB (Open Source) Download: Portable VidCoder 12.19 | 89.3 MB Link: VidCoder Home Page | Github | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Too soon, I'm still not over this death!
    • Normally, I admit when a title is clickbait (unfortunately, it's become somewhat necessary to compete against AI-dominated news sections today), but in this case, all supported versions is implied and doesn't need to be spelled out in the title. Of course, I'm covering a Patch Tuesday update bug that is only available to supported Windows SKUs. All our coverage relates to supported Windows software and SKUs only unless we expressly state that it's "unsupported", "unofficial", or "third-party". I'm sorry, but supported/official SKUs don't need to be spelled out as such in every Neowin headline.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Jordan Smith earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Reacting Well
      BizSAR earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • First Post
      AndreaB earned a badge
      First Post
    • Week One Done
      Huge Trailer earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      Classifyskilleducation earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      593
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      185
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      77
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      73
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      66
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!