[geeks] DVD install of MacOS 10.5.3 or 10.5.4
Lionel Peterson
lionel4287 at gmail.com
Tue Aug 5 12:47:14 CDT 2008
What constantly amazes me is that I can't download an ISO of the
vendor-supplied install disc for a given MB. I typically put the
network driver on via USB key, then let windows find everything.
The problem with loading drivers in WinXP and Server 2003 is that the
underlying OS is 5+ years old...
Vista/Server 2008 will read in USB keys and CDs, but only for storage
drivers (I think)...
I wish I could make a folder called $DRIVERS$ in the root dir of a
drive and install would query it before giving up on a device...
Lionel
On Aug 5, 2008, at 1:31 PM, Nadine Miller <velociraptor at gmail.com>
wrote:
> On Aug 2, 2008, at 10:44 AM, Jonathan C. Patschke wrote:
>
>> On Sat, 2 Aug 2008, Lionel Peterson wrote:
>>
>>> The only real pain I feel in a Windows install is the *repeated*
>>> passes
>>> through Windows Update to get *all* the updates related to
>>> previously
>>> downloaded updates...
>>
>> You can use a tool like nLite to slipstream in most updates (and
>> bundle in
>> drivers that weren't part of the OS). I made a few model-specific
>> CDs for
>> $ork that install SP3 plus support for all the hardware, and then
>> included
>> many of our site-specific apps on the remainder of the CD. The end
>> result
>> is something as nice as any manufacturer's "restore CD" plus the
>> added
>> bonus of it not being laden with crapware.
>>
>> I've heard you can even install Office and Visual Studio from that
>> procedure if you use DVD media, but there's the chance that the
>> installation will take "too long" and the fixed-duration timer in the
>> Windows installation program will kill that portion of setup.
>
> You can. This is how the various "All In One" DVDs floating around
> out there work. Most enterprise environments just use Ghost or
> Acronis, though, to deploy images.
>
> The real pain in re-installing XP (or Vista, for that matter) is
> fetching and installing the latest and greatest hardware drivers.
> As *slow* as DL'ing and updating everything from M$ is, at least
> they are all in one place. Many mobo manufacturers don't keep their
> web sites updated with everything that's available for their on-
> board chipsets, integrated video, etc. Then there's your add-on
> cards. It's like a spelunking expedition unless everything you have
> in your computer is mainstream.
>
> My #1 complaint with the XP install is that unless you slipstream,
> the *ONLY* place it will look for "additional drivers" during
> install is from a floppy. What is this, 1998? :-/ I haven't had
> the need to do this with Vista, so I can't comment as to whether it
> does the same or not.
>
> =Nadine=
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