Thanks. Downloading it and will investigate. Thanks again.Search for Tomeko's JSONEdit to manage JSON files easily.
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On first post.Sorry...but where I can download the Mini Windows 10 x64 -- Windows 10 WinPE Boot Environment, and PortableApps Suite ??
Here in this pages I don't see the link...
Thanks a lot and best regards
It's almost done, I just have more testing to do and it should be uploaded in a day or two. Secure boot is already supported, but recommended to be disabled.Hi thank you for the work ventoy is going to 1.0.17 are you going to upgrade to this version? And the secure boot too?
You need to read the forum first.
Move all files of the ExFAT partition to another drive and then use some partition program to delete the ExFAT partition and create a NTFS partition using all the avaliable space. Then just move the files back
FAT32 has a limitation where only files 4GB and under can be used, so any large ISOs like a multilingual, multi-version Windows installer could run into issues, for example. I would test your theory out on a spare drive and play around with it if I were you, before committing to anything serious. You don't want to lose any data I'm sure.can i install it on a external hd (1 tb), and make a partition for the remaining storage capacity? (1 partition for medicat and another for storage)? it will works?
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hey let me ask u something, I can use multiple partitions and still make medicat works? I mean, I have a external drive but I need use fat32 partition and ntfs (for some reasons), the fat32 partition can be a problem to medicat works properly?
I don't think you're going to get iTunes installed and working properly on a Windows 10 Preinstall Environment... It's a supplemental OS for PC repair, not a replacement OS to use for daily tasks. It's mostly there for moving files, running tooks to fix what's on your C:\ drive, etc.@Jayro how can I make a bootable with 10GB on X: partition and have iTunes 12.9.0.167 preinstalled? Would like that you tell us so I can add also additional software.
I see no reason why not, iTunes doesn't know it's running on WinPE. The only potential issue I could see is with drivers, as back on WinXP anything but networking and mass storage drivers didn't seem to work. But I think that's no longer an issue with modern WInPE? Haven't tested it though.I don't think you're going to get iTunes installed and working properly on a Windows 10 Preinstall Environment... It's a supplemental OS for PC repair, not a replacement OS to use for daily tasks. It's mostly there for moving files, running tooks to fix what's on your C:\ drive, etc.
Well I'm certainly not going to try and put effort into making iTunes work on WinPE, as I have no need for iTunes in general, or at all. But best of luck to those who want to try.I see no reason why not, iTunes doesn't know it's running on WinPE. The only potential issue I could see is with drivers, as back on WinXP anything but networking and mass storage drivers didn't seem to work. But I think that's no longer an issue with modern WInPE? Haven't tested it though.
I don't expect you to. But I don't expect it would be much of a problem for him to get it working himself either. Might not be as automated as he wants it though. But mounting a RAM drive and copying some files to it is not that hard, albeit temporary.Well I'm certainly not going to try and put effort into making iTunes work on WinPE, as I have no need for iTunes in general, or at all. But best of luck to those who want to try.
FAT32 has a limitation where only files 4GB and under can be used, so any large ISOs like a multilingual, multi-version Windows installer could run into issues, for example. I would test your theory out on a spare drive and play around with it if I were you, before committing to anything serious. You don't want to lose any data I'm sure.
I did it already several times, and iTunes works perfectly fine, however can't be installed onto X:, but on F:, for example. However it must install something to X: as well, because if I reboot the PE trying to launch iTunes again from F: does not work, I have to reinstall it each time. So if there were a way to to enlarge X: partition and make it persistent...some Linux distributions allow for persistent partitioning. Example:I see no reason why not, iTunes doesn't know it's running on WinPE. The only potential issue I could see is with drivers, as back on WinXP anything but networking and mass storage drivers didn't seem to work. But I think that's no longer an issue with modern WInPE? Haven't tested it though.