Ito ay para sa mga nagkakaproblema kapag nagko Clone po tayo ng HDD to HDD example kapag galing kay Intel at nagclone papuntang AMD kadalasan error or BSOD , Pwes heto na po ang kasagutan before kayo mag clone gawin po ninyo itong steps na nasa baba at kapag nagawa na mag Clone at subukan!!!
Run Sysprep on a computer (virtual or physical) but in my case I will be doing a virtual machine running on Hyper-V.
1 On a reference (VM) computer, install the operating system and any programs that you want installed on your destination computers.
2 Click Start, type cmd, and then click OK.
3 At the command prompt, change to the root folder of drive C, Type C: then type CD %SystemRoot%\System32\Sysprep
4 Now you can run the sysprep.exe file but let’s start by running the /h switch sysprep /h which will pop up a help box.
5 Notice that you can run everything on the command-line which is how I normally use it. However, there is a Graphical User Interface for the program that you will likely want to use until you get familiar with this tool.
6 Now, let’s run it again without any parameters… sysprep
7 Turn on the generalize checkbox. If you intend to transfer a Windows image to a different computer, you must run sysprep /generalize, even if the computer has the same hardware configuration. The sysprep /generalize command removes unique information from your Windows installation, which enables you to reuse that image on different computers. The next time you boot the Windows image, the specialize configuration pass runs. During this configuration pass, many components have actions that must be processed when you boot a Windows image on a new computer. Any method of moving a Windows image to a new computer, either through imaging, hard disk duplication, VM copying or other method, must be prepared with the sysprep /generalize command. Moving or copying a Windows image to a different computer without running sysprep /generalize is not supported.
8 You will want to Shutdown the machine when done (instead of restart). If you restart, the out-of-box experience will run before you have a chance to copy the image.
9 If you are sure, you want to wipe out all of the security data on the machine, go ahead and click OK!
10 Sysprep does not capture the image it only prepares the machine to be captured. If you are doing this in a virtual machine, the image becomes the .VHD or .VHDX file after you shutdown the machine, copy it or duplicate it at will. If you are doing a physical computer, you will need an imaging tool, like ImageX, to capture an image of the installation.
Run Sysprep on a computer (virtual or physical) but in my case I will be doing a virtual machine running on Hyper-V.
1 On a reference (VM) computer, install the operating system and any programs that you want installed on your destination computers.
2 Click Start, type cmd, and then click OK.
3 At the command prompt, change to the root folder of drive C, Type C: then type CD %SystemRoot%\System32\Sysprep
4 Now you can run the sysprep.exe file but let’s start by running the /h switch sysprep /h which will pop up a help box.
5 Notice that you can run everything on the command-line which is how I normally use it. However, there is a Graphical User Interface for the program that you will likely want to use until you get familiar with this tool.
6 Now, let’s run it again without any parameters… sysprep
7 Turn on the generalize checkbox. If you intend to transfer a Windows image to a different computer, you must run sysprep /generalize, even if the computer has the same hardware configuration. The sysprep /generalize command removes unique information from your Windows installation, which enables you to reuse that image on different computers. The next time you boot the Windows image, the specialize configuration pass runs. During this configuration pass, many components have actions that must be processed when you boot a Windows image on a new computer. Any method of moving a Windows image to a new computer, either through imaging, hard disk duplication, VM copying or other method, must be prepared with the sysprep /generalize command. Moving or copying a Windows image to a different computer without running sysprep /generalize is not supported.
8 You will want to Shutdown the machine when done (instead of restart). If you restart, the out-of-box experience will run before you have a chance to copy the image.
9 If you are sure, you want to wipe out all of the security data on the machine, go ahead and click OK!
10 Sysprep does not capture the image it only prepares the machine to be captured. If you are doing this in a virtual machine, the image becomes the .VHD or .VHDX file after you shutdown the machine, copy it or duplicate it at will. If you are doing a physical computer, you will need an imaging tool, like ImageX, to capture an image of the installation.
Last edited: