2020. 2. 26. 07:17ㆍ카테고리 없음
I've recently found out about E2B and was delighted that I can now create a USB flash with all the tools I need. The ISO contains instructions for a USB drive.I would1. Place the ISO in the ISOMAINMENU folder and name it.isowinvH2.
Extract the contents of the ISO (HBCD+F4UBCD+BOOT folders only) to the root of the E2B drive3. Copy the menu.lst file to ISOMAINMENUUTILITYF4UBCD.lst4. Make a new file at ISOMAINMENUUTILITYF4UBCD.mnuiftitle if exist /ISO/MAINMENU/UTILITY/F4UBCD.lst && if exist /F4UBCD F4UBCDn F4UBCDconfigfile /ISO/MAINMENU/UTILITY/F4UBCD.lstNow try both the isowinvh menu item and the F4UBCD menu items to see what works and what doesn't in each. Splashimage=/F4UBCD/Images/bg.xpm.gzforeground=FFFFFFbackground=000000default 4title Boot First Hard Drive (hd0)nnGets you out of here.rootnoverify (hd0)chainloader (hd0)+1title Remap & Boot First HDDnnIf you booted from USB (e.g. Thank you Steve for your speedy reply!I did exactly the same as you suggest me except I disabled numbering so it is fine but I just thought that maybe it is easiest way.re, Extend horizontal window - this is easily done in MyE2B.cfg using the menu border settings - e.g. Rstart, noitems, menuw - (is this what you mean?)I played with these options and I was able only to re size the window vertically but I can not find an option to change horizontally (some of my entries are invisible on my main menu)Tnx Steve. means 'or if this fails' 'or if this fails'.mnu files must be created manually and are tailored for each ISO.
Easy2Boot will boot most.iso files without needing a.mnu file but when these boot they will have the same behaviour as if you booted from a CD. If you want to modify the way the ISO boots, then you need to modify the ISO in some way.mnu often change the start parameters, etc. And these parameters will be specific to the type of ISO used (e.g. Linux cheat codes vary from version to version). Has anyone managed to get a flash drive to work with E2B?HMP requires that KickStart be run from a usb flash drive. There's an iso(CD), but that is only for systems that do not support booting from usb and you still have to insert the kickstart flash drive after booting the iso(CD).
I would like to avoid having a separate usb stick for this and was wondering how this might be implemented using just the E2B usb.I made a HitManPro USB drive using their utility and then copied the 3 files HitmanPro.exe, HitmanProx64.exe and Kickstarter.exe to the root of my E2B drive.Then I added the ISO file to the ISOmainmenu folder.It seems to boot to the ISO OK and I can choose option 1,2 or 3 and then it boots from the internal HDD. But it seems to boot to autorepair (WinRE) rather than Windows 7 or 8???I tried various.iso extensions (e.g,.isowinv) but they all seemed to produce the same result (or just not boot at all).Edit YES! See for how to add HitManPro to a grub4dos or Easy2Boot USB multiboot drive./Edit. To make the HitManPro.bin I used RMPrepUSb to make a file of the first 63 sectors of the HitManPro USB boot disk. I got the same result as booting from the ISO - Windows 7 or 8 boots to the Repair WinRE OS rather than the full OS.Maybe there is also some code written past the end of the volume.??Do you get to the choices.like.:USB Boot Options:1 Bypass Master Boot Record default2 Regular boot (when bypass failed)3 Legacy boot (last chance)Please enter your choice:Is the behaviour the same, no matter what you choose?And yes, if I were you, I would also check the last few sectors of the USB stick, let's say last 55 sectors.Wonko.
My prior review of Kaiser's 'entry-level' went to great lengths to showcase company and design philosophy. Practicing the lazy man's way to enlightenment or at least a good rest, I direct you at that article's intro pages. They'll get you up to full speed. For the heart of that lengthy matter, I'll merely reiterate basics. Panzerholz aka tankwood is 20 times costlier than the ubiquitous MDF. It's brutal on router blades, hence shunned by the vast majority.
It's a composite which under intense pressure compacts Birch Ply to 60% of its original thickness whilst injecting it with a resin polymer to seal all of its molecular pores. Enter a manufactured material that's bullet-proof and tough enough to hold tightly machined threads without stripping. That's the stuff Kaiser build their speakers from. Theirs is a 3 rd-generation family fully equipped woodworking operation in Germany.
They specialize in large monolithic furniture for board rooms and hotel lobbies as well as VIP booths for car shows in Frankfurt, Geneva and Paris. Embedded in that industrial operation and essentially subsidized by it is a small acoustic division. It's here where they design/manufacture loudspeakers, acoustic treatments and extravagantly styled solid-wood listening rooms. Classic is their current 3-way flagship tower. Something far bigger is on the drawing board as requested by Asian distributors.
Those industrious chaps wear the mantra of 'bigger and a lot more expensive is better' as bold body ink. Meanwhile their conservative European counterparts admit to living in regularly sized homes; or compact but luxurious inner-city flats. Those rational folks find complete non-subwoofer'd satisfaction in the unconventional passive radiator-equipped Chiara already.
If they just must have something solid to the floor and mean to squeeze an extra 10 cycles from the stand-mounted Chiara's potent bass recipe. Then those folks can pursue the heavier rather costlier Classic.
Beyond that, they'd want palatial digs for justification. That fine print kept it real so we won't upsell non-necessities.
Now we're free to inspect the subject of today's affections: a 10' three-way with Carbon/paper rear-firing woofer and floor-facing port. The frontal drivers are a 7' Audio Technology midrange; and a custom 2.5' Raal ribbon with silver/gold/Palladium-wired transformer in a head module that's user-adjustable for front/aft time alignment and for toe-in as entirely separate from the main enclosure. The upper rear driver is an 8' auxiliary bass radiator. It loads the midrange in lieu of a port or sealed alignment. Now reference the opening photos. You'll appreciate how the main enclosure is wider in the back than front; narrower on top than bottom.
The only parallel panels are the top and bottom. Add that geometry to the ultra-hard tankwood. You're looking at a speaker which not many could build (or would want to given its exorbitant manufacturing cost over MDF).
Kon Boot Windows 10
Steep production expense continues with the top drivers and Mundorf/Duelund crossover parts. The next photo speaks to that.