There are many articles which reference slip streaming and many of them provide the basic instruction. However, most of them do not tell you how to make the resulting Windows + SP CD bootable; the process below will:
This will take some time to complete.
click to enlarge
Everything up to this point is dead easy and you can simply copy the resulting files onto a CD and be on your way with just one limitation… the disk will not be bootable. If you want it to be bootable, continue through the next steps.
Put the file somewhere handy like your desktop. For the purpose of this example, I will assume it is extracted to C:\MICROSOFT CORPORATION.IMG
- the CD name MUST be exactly what the original cd’s name was. Here are some examples:
Windows XP Professional Open License = X1APVOL_EN
Windows XP Professional Retail = WXPCCP_EN
Windows XP Home Retail = WXHCCP_EN
Windows XP Professional OEM = WXPOEM_EN
Windows XP Home OEM = WXHOEM_EN
If you use a name that is different from that of the original disk, your new disk will not be bootable so it is worth checking.- Point the boot image path to your extracted bootloader (i.e. C:\MICROSOFT CORPORATION.IMG)
- Select NO EMULATION (floppy emulation will result in a non-bootable disk)
- Set the NUMBER OF LOADED SECTORS to 4
- Set the FILE SYSTEM to JOLIET
- Set the PHYSICAL FORMAT to MODE 1
I think Nero is the easiest tool to perform this task with but you can do this with Roxio 5 and 9 aswell. Note that it is quite difficult to accomplish with Roxio 7 and 7.5. Each CD burning package will be different but make this easier, I have a few screen shots of the relevant setting below:
Nero
Roxio EZ CD 5
Roxio EZ CD 6
Enjoy your bootable CD.
Additional resources:
http://www.winsupersite.com/showcase/windowsxp_sp2_slipstream.asp
http://www17.tomshardware.com/howto/20040908/winxp-sp2-integration-02.html
http://www.broomeman.com/support/wsbootcd.html
http://www.theeldergeek.com/slipstream_01.htm
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