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Gadzhi Kochkarev2018-02-05 13:04:44
Windows
Gadzhi Kochkarev, 2018-02-05 13:04:44

How to export hardware linked to a computer?

Good afternoon! In pursuit of the fastest possible restoration of the computer's working capacity, I began to look for different ways, and this is what I came to.
The organization has 70 identical computers. People are inexperienced, so something often breaks, and only reinstallation saves. To make it easier, I created a Windows wim-image with all the necessary software and replaced the original wim-image in the system partition with my own, now the reinstallation is very easy, it’s worth starting the computer while holding the F2 button, after which I get to the OneKey Recovery menu, where I choose to restore from the original copies. At the end, you may need to enter a username, accept the license agreement, wait for the device installation to complete and the desktop to start. The batch file and tweaks for the registry help you quickly set up your computer for work. At the time, I thought I had mastered the art of quick system recovery, but just recently I learned about the possibility of installing Windows on a VHD. Now I have this schema: the main operating system is on the C drive, and on the D drive I have a folder with three VHDs. I set up one VHD and made two more copies of it. By default, one is launched, and the user works with it without affecting the main OS. If there is any problem, I just go to the main OS, delete the VHD with the broken system and add a copy of this VHD to the boot and the computer boots again with a clean system without entering accounts, installing devices, etc.
When transferring an already finished VHD to another computer, the equipment is still installed and all parameters are applied, as at the first start.
The task is to have one reference VHD and “backups” of installed equipment in a shared network folder so that it can be applied to the VHD image.
That's the question, how can I export this hardware binding data to a computer?

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3 answer(s)
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Ezhyg, 2018-02-05
@Ezhyg

There is no "link" there. It's just that the OS installs firewood on a new hardware for itself.
The options are either to "seal" the installation after going through all the settings, or install drivers for all possible pieces of iron, the OS itself will quickly find new hardware and use the firewood already in the database.

S
Sergey, 2018-02-05
@feanor7

In my opinion, you went the wrong way, users can do everything, hence the problems.
You can go your way with a reference full backup, and roll user files, with the same hardware it will work, even if it is not the same it will work)))) If the version of windows is oem, this is windows 10 which itself will pull up the firewood, just give me the Internet.

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Artem @Jump, 2018-02-06
curated by the

People are inexperienced, so something often breaks, and only reinstallation saves.
Why reinstall?
1) Rollback to a checkpoint - if the problem is minor and happened recently, the most effective.
2) Restore from a backup.
This is much faster than any reinstallation.
Reinstallation is evil.

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