According to the Microsoft website I can run 'Create a system repair disc' from the start menu to burn a recovery Disc. However, there are many situations (including not having a disk drive) where this cannot be done.
My goal is to create a bootable USB drive according to this guide but their method to do so without burning a physical disc includes downloading an ISO from 'somebody's' website. I don't know who 'somebody' is and I feel it is reasonable to not boot something I can't verify as being untampered with. To the best of my knowledge, Microsoft does not host a recovery disc ISO for download as this would be the easiest solution.
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So my problem is that I'd like to circumvent Microsofts 'burn to disc' option with a 'burn to ISO' through any reasonable means.
Gypsy SpellweaverSep 29, 2017. Artificial intelligence is infiltrating our daily lives, with applications that curate your phone pics, manage your email, and translate text from any language into. Nero 3D Templates there. A hard disk image is interpreted by a Virtual Machine Monitor as a system hard disk drive. IT administrators and software.
You can download an official ISO from Microsoft's digital distributor, Digital River. Using the Windows 7 USB tool, available from Microsoft here, you can make a bootable install USB drive that will allow you to access the recovery tools. No disc-burning required.
Make sure you select the correct ISO for the Windows you are attempting to repair. You can also reinstall from the USB stick, but you will need your own product key that should have come with your computer.
techturtletechturtleWell, I know the others are trying to help but I am pretty sure none of these answers solved it because I was with the same problem as you. So here was what I found:
Steps:
1 - Open your temp folder through: Start -> Run (type on the search programs and files box 'run', or shortcut windows+d) -> type %temp% on the Run box (it will open your temp folder);
2 - Go to the system repair disc tool (Yes, I know there is no disc on the drive): Start -> All Programs -> Maintenance -> Create a System Repair Disc
3 - Once you click to create a disc you are going to receive a message 'System repair disc could not be created. There is no media in the device.'. It's ok, continue closing ONLY this message, the Create a system repair disc windows MUST still be open.
4 - Now you can see at the temp folder, you have a new file called 'somesortofbignumber.iso' around 100 or 200 MB (if you can't see it press F5 to refresh the folder). But still, you can't move, or copy, or anything the file because the system says it is in use. That is your ISO file, you just can't do anything with it yet. So, in this part you have to use a program that let you manage these kind of files. I used one called Unlocker.
5 - After you installed Unlocker the only thing you have to do is: Right click 'somesortofbignumber.iso' -> select Unlocker -> select the option 'Copy' and the destination folder (remember if you want to rename the file don't forget the '.iso' ending).
After that you can search for a USB tool solution from a ISO file.
It worked very well for me, good luck.
Bit late to answer this question. But I found a very decent tutorial on how to handle this using 'TotalMounter' and 'Rufus'. It is available here:
Hope this helps for other users in future..
Thanks
I know it's old question but some people might still struggle with this problem.
Basically what you need is virtual burner. This answer explains how to use one of them.
The Unlocker strategy did not work for me. The instant I unlocked the ISO file, the system deleted it! That might have something to do with the file's attribute, 'T,' for Temporary file.
But here is what did work: install an undelete program. As soon as Create Repair Disk deletes the ISO file, use your undelete program to undelete the file. I used the free program EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard, in particular the Deep Scan feature. Note that the free version allows you to undelete up to 300 MB of deleted files. After that, you have to pay for the licensed version.
My Temp folder is on its own small disk partition, so the deleted ISO file is very unlikely to get overwritten. If your Temp folder is on the Windows partition (probably C:), then there is a chance the deleted ISO file could get partly overwritten and hence corrupted even if you undelete it right away. You should close all other programs when you attempt this solution.
A great mirror for Digital River contents:
Note for the author:
Try burning to disk if you can, and then make an ISO of that disk using tool like ImgBurn.
Except for burning, you can also mount the iso file. It could be worked when you don't have a disk drive. You can using the tool like WinISO or Daemon Tools.