Thank you, OverFlow.

Because I'm writing an article about UBCD4Win. I followed this guide to slipstream drivers.
http://driverpacks.net/docs/Miscellaneo … rtpe-guide

Some readers run UBCD4Win in VMware Player as another OS. They don't care too much the boot time but the multimedia functions.

Now I know more about DriverPacks and UBCD4Win's driver mechanism. Thank you.

Thank you, mr_smartepants. smile

I want to use BartPE as a LiveCD with multimedia function.

Why some drivers (Sound, Chipset, CPU, etc.) can't be checked if I choose BartPE? I've downloaded all the latest drivers.
How to add sound drivers as plugin to BartPE?


http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1435/5099974378_ac268c4aa2_o.png

OverFlow wrote:

NO... ABSOLUTELY NOT you will destroy your source~!

however you can leave nLite open at the make ISO screen while you run DriverPacks and use nlite after DriverPacks to make your ISO.

if you make ANY changes after DriverPacks AT ALL you will have junk

Yes. I know why I frequently get a warning when nLite processes the source files, because nLite must be used before DriverPacks.

I also solve another issue from your another post.

Thanks so much.

Jaak wrote:

Hi pclover,

the link you got that wisdom from was written in 2006. (the tell-tale is the version numbers of the packs it is about.)

In my signature, I again link to our somewhat outdated (albeit outdated.. it still has tons of useful insights..) collaboration base tute

I've been scarce, I know that. I should try put time in this tut and should start a new colllaboration effort so as update it, but there're several reasons for my being scarce, so it may not be soon.

(I wish the economic crisis did not bite. It bit.)

Thank you for the detailed DP_Base Tutorial. Now I have installed my unattended ISO in a virtual machine successfully.

Hi, I'm a newbie. Please help me with the order of DriverPacks and nLite.

In this instruction you warned that we should do in this order: 1) nLite, 2) Updatepack, 3) DriverPacks.

My question is whether I can use DriverPacks before nLite, because DriverPacks doesn't have a Make ISO function. Is the following steps feasible?
1) copy Windows XP SP3 (MSDN edition) to the hard disk
2) Use DriverPacks to slipstream
3) Use nLite to make an unattended installation image file

Thanks.