@@roberto88958 XP will not run faster on a NVME drive I am not a poor panchito like you with chinese crap I mostly only use Samsung PRO drives but don't actually feel a significant difference over a 3.5'' HDD
@@zumeria177 TRIM is actually done now at hardware level, by the SSD itself (the controller will take care) so you don't need to worry about unnecessary wearing. You just need to disable defrag so no data is moved around without a good reason.
Yes, it is! And it's stable and pretty snappy too. And if you are using a up to date router you shouldn't worry about all the viruses in the world. It won't happen since XP is behind your router that runs a version of Linux.
Oh yes, I know about .NET and Windows 95 affair. But I don't think many people know that you still can install Windows 95 on latest generation hardware. And now things are looking even better since the software base increased with "thousands" of apps.
Hey, these videos are amazing. However, I'd like to ask for a particular set of "old OS in new hardware", that instead of installing it directly to the hardware, rather through a VM, like KVM (proxmox for instance), or through VMware but without broken sound and horrible disk performance and such. That'll be amazing!
I actually did this the other day with a 9600k z390 chipset.Integral Edition is my go to for xp. What custom iso settings/options would you recommend for ryzen? I havent been able to get that working right. Awesome video.
Hmm... I have a B450 motherboard with a Ryzen 2xxx CPU laying around I will transplant the NVMe from this video there... to see what happens. Intel USB drivers won't work for sure... :)) A while ago, I did install it on my Ryzen 3900X PC but I use a VIA 6421 PCI to SATA card which compatible with any Windows ever released...
Kind of awesome that microsoft made a 32 bit windows 7 driver for nvme, and that it was backported to windows xp. Amazing! Legacy mode and everything, SCSI device. I've never tried that!
Windows 7 was under warranty when NVME was launched. They had to do it. :) By the way: „Windows 7 End of Life date is 10th January 2023 End of Life (EOL), in software terms, means that a company no longer supports, updates, or patches that piece of software.”
@@max_MXX Let me correct you a bit: Windows 7's EOL ended on January 14th 2020. That's the date when it ceased it's extended support. January 10th 2023 is the date when 7 stopped getting additional security updates.
This is a really good video. I wish you could show more details about how you found the drivers that you integrated in the disc but it’s still very informative. I do have a question for you. I followed the link to the integral copy of windows Xp and it looks like everything that’s needed is already added to that iso. Am I right on my assumption? Or do we still need to look for drivers to make the install work? Thank you for the video. I will help a lot of people out. 😊
The ISO you originally download has standard ACPI and no NVME drivers, it's more or less the original SP3 ISO released by Microsoft. Packed with the .ISO there is a folder with lots of subfolders and drivers. You use the Patch Integrator to add the needed drivers and to create a second custom .ISO. That's why you need the original .ISO in the first place, because the content is somewhat standardized and the patch integrator expects certain files with certain versions to be there.
better on a desktop as you can add compatible gpu and other cards to make up for lack of drivers, on a laptop you wont be getting to far on anything past 3rd gen i think? maybe 4/5th has gpu drivers idk
Thanks! Yes, you can install using VIA 6421 PCI to SATA adapter, the drivers are already included, you don't even need to use Patch Integrator if your computer is
Windows 2000 has ACPI too, which it doesn't work well native hardware on Z97 with NVMe SSD. Just have to use SATA only. The only, I have to use Win 2000 slipstream installer along with service pack 4 unofficial. While it works well with USB 3.
i tired using an NVME drive as a secondary drive in windows xp with that nvme driver from the integral version but whenever id try to run crystal disk mark it could complete the read test but as soon as it would start writing to the drive the system would hard lock. same with just trying to copy files to the drive as soon as the copy would start the system would hard lock. tired with several drives adata/samsung/wd. this was with an older x58 motherboard within a pci-e to nvme adapter card tired a startech one and some no name one made no dif. same thing would happen to nvme drives in a usb encloser to.
What exact driver from Integral Edition? There are 5 NVMe drivers: Intel NVMe driver v4.0.0.1007 Kai-Schtrom OFA NVMe driver v1.3 Samsung NVMe driver v3.3.0.2003 Microsoft NVMe driver v6.1.7601.23403 Silicon Motion NVMe driver v10.4.49.0 When I made this video I installed XP from SATA first but when I tried to load NVMe driver manually didn't work. Didn't spent much time to investigate so I reinstalled with a NVME ready custom ISO.
Installing NVME drivers using Device Manager didn't work for me either. I didn't spent much time in investigating this issue, I rather preferred to perform a fresh install. So my advice is to replicate the steps from this video and make that custom ISO and install XP directly on NVME.
I have to check if it works with this specific ISO, but when it comes to XP 32bit you always can install it from DOS and not rely on USB at all. Check this video on how to install it from DOS: th-cam.com/video/xF0ApHpPh-o/w-d-xo.html
I find Microsoft’s own drivers more stable overall-they’re designed to work on millions of computers, after all. They may not be the fastest option for USB 3, but they reliably get the job done.
@O_mores you're right. But I have a problem. When I try Microsoft AHCI driver, after the second phase of the setup, it gives 0x7b error (at phase 3). Other drivers directly gives 0x7b before installing. How can I solve this?
@@ages2001 In this video I installed it on a NVMe drive and it was surprisingly easy - the drive just showed up during the setup and no tweaking was required. I didn't tried the Microsoft AHCI driver on my socket 1700 configuration. I did use UniATA with XP on other configurations - and I know you are familiar with it. So I have get into this situation myself (to try so install with MS AHCI on a SATA drive) to give any insights.
regarding the external kingston storage that went in usb, could you have had a bottleneck since you were still using 2.0? or were you already using 3.0?
At 300 megabytes per second we are definitely on the USB 3.0 territory. It's just a patched driver not meant for Windows XP - might gave better results with other Intel chipsets. But considering you don't have to do any fiddling to get USB 3.0 working... it's very good as it is... :)
You certainly can do it even on some older motherboards if you really want to, but it's not easy. You can flash the bootrom to a PCI/PCI-E Ethernet card, this way the drive will be initialized and you can boot from it. I knew people who done it this way. I would like to try it - but right now I don't have any PCI-E to nVME adapter.
@@O_mores I bought one myself from aliexpress. They have it very cheaply. It works very well on HP 800G1, but I had to mod UEFI to include NVME driver. Do You have any links how to proceed with bootrom which You mentioned? (I already did something similar with XTIDE)
Sorry, I don't have any links. A while ago I ran into a topic on vogons.org where a dude flashed his 3COM card with a custom bootrom extracted from a Samsung drive. If I find that topic I will post a link in this thread.
can you please help me? I have a weird issue, I used the patch integrator with winsetupfromusb, it boots, welcome screen, everything looks fine until pressing enter, the system instantly powers off without a error or warning, I have a lenovo Y700-17ISK, i7-6700HQ, lexar SSD NM710 1TB I'm also gonna try all the "* Alternative Options:" NVMe drivers
It sounds like ACPI might be the issue if the system powers off unexpectedly. Try experimenting with different ACPI variants-starting with no ACPI changes. Keep in mind that newer ACPI options are designed for modern motherboards and your configuration is somewhere in between... Also you can press F5 and pick MPS multiprocessor this way ACPI won't be used at all. For me, the newer and default ACPI option from the patch integrator worked successfully on both an Intel H610 motherboard and an Intel Z790 motherboard: imgur.com/gallery/windows-xp-running-on-bare-metal-i5-14600kf-z790-motherboard-8fICm1E
Now pair with 980Ti and will be able to play mega sized, heavily modded Sim City 4 (once PAE patched for 4GB RAM) without days of lag. Will be needing something like this for current OSes in 20 years, so we can do the same for City Skylines. Damn those juicy mods needing hardware that's decades away to properly enjoy 😀
Absolutely! The 980 Ti is a perfect match for Windows XP and it's actually the best card for older games, the world record in 3D Mark 2001 is held by 980TI (heavily overclocked, with custom cooling). I have a GTX 980 and it was so easy to install in XP.
I do have a few Quadros, but nothing high-end. Anyway I have two identical GTX 980s from Asus, I will try to setup them in SLI. According to nVidia it should work: "The following SLI features are not supported on Windows XP: Geforce GTX 680, 670 SLI Quad SLI technology using GeForce GTX 590, GeForce 9800 GX2 or GeForce GTX 295 3-way SLI technology Hybrid SLI SLI multi-monitor support"
Bene, devi creare quell'ISO personalizzato come mostrato nel video. Il file .ISO scaricato originariamente non dispone di driver AHCI corretti. Utilizza l'integratore di patch per aggiungere driver e salvare la nuova ISO, quindi utilizzala.
Great video👍, but i've tried all the SATA AHCI drivers that are in the options, but I still get 0x00007b error.. Can you plz help me?😢 My brand is: Lenovo™Yoga 520
@@O_mores Yes, instead of CD/DVD, I burnt it into a USB drive, cuz the laptop doesn't have a CD/DVD drive. But burning it into a USB drive doesn't work, cuz it just straight up don't boot, it just restarts. So I tried adding a Windows XP Setup ISO entry using EasyBCD (AHCI doesn't work). And also booting the ISO using Easy2Boot (AHCI works, but there are no hard drives detected). No matter how hard I tried, it just doesn't wanna work.
@MimosEpic You can install it from DOS, you have to copy the CD contents on your HDD/SSD and start the setup with winnt.exe from i386 folder. Here a video dealing with this procedure: th-cam.com/video/xF0ApHpPh-o/w-d-xo.html
Doc Brown: I foresee two possibilities. One: it may create a disequilibrium which might be fatal at high RPM. Or two, the encounter could create a time paradox, the result of which could cause a chain reaction that would unravel the very fabric of the space-time continuum and destroy the entire universe! Granted, that's worst-case scenario. The destruction might in fact be very localized, limited to merely our own galaxy.
Znaleziony program winXp to wirus, instalując go, instaluje się 35 programów. Wysypał mi w10 gdy próbowałem odinstalować programy ręcznie. Wyskakujące okna i tak jakby ktoś za mnie klikał. same akceptacje administratora. Ehh, teraz już muszę jakiś system postawić bo mam roslinke
Hi admin, I'm currently using Windows 11 on Ryzen 7 8700G, but I still have another PC unit Ryzen 5 3400G. I plan to operate this unit with Windows XP SP3, can you help me? The specifications are as follows: AMD Ryzen 5 3400G processor. Gigabyte GA A320M-S2H motherboard. 512gb NVme drive. 1TB SSD storage. 2x8gb DDR4 RAM. nVidia GTX 1660 Super.
How can I help you? I see that the GA-A320M-S2H mobo has TWO PS/2 ports which is great for installing any legacy OS. Just make the custom ISO as show in the video. Meanwhile I made another Windows XP video this time running on Intel 14600KF CPU + Asus Z790-P Prime WiFi Motherboard: th-cam.com/video/n6woUdZcJgE/w-d-xo.html so you check it out for more information.
Check out the description, you'll find there a download link, and I think I covered in this video how must be used to get NVME, ACPI and USB 3 drivers on it.
How do you solve the issue that sometime while downloading drivers XP ask you to insert the service pack disk (or usb in some case if installation was done with rufus)?
So far I didn't get into this situation. But I remember that in the early days of XP (with no service packs) when installing a USB keyboard or mouse - XP was showing up the driver installation dialog - asking you to press "Continue" - while your mouse and keyboard weren't installed yet. I installed XP for a friend using PS/2 mouse and keyboard, I brought him the PC - but he had only USB mouse and keyboard. He called me to bring him a PS/2 keyboard so he can install his USB keyboard...
The most responsiv3 Windows XP pc to ever have existed
it's a waste of time. XP has not been optimized to be used on SSD's let alone NVME ones
@@zumeria177 What exactly needs to be optimized? You are worried than a 10$ SSD will wear out?
@@roberto88958 XP will not run faster on a NVME drive
I am not a poor panchito like you with chinese crap I mostly only use Samsung PRO drives but don't actually feel a significant difference over a 3.5'' HDD
@@zumeria177 TRIM is actually done now at hardware level, by the SSD itself (the controller will take care) so you don't need to worry about unnecessary wearing. You just need to disable defrag so no data is moved around without a good reason.
@@zumeria177Windows XP runs much faster on ssd than on hdd.
Hey, that's pretty good! I love how big the XP/2000 community is online and that they make these kind of things possible
Yes, it is! And it's stable and pretty snappy too. And if you are using a up to date router you shouldn't worry about all the viruses in the world. It won't happen since XP is behind your router that runs a version of Linux.
MattKC would be proud
Oh yes, I know about .NET and Windows 95 affair. But I don't think many people know that you still can install Windows 95 on latest generation hardware. And now things are looking even better since the software base increased with "thousands" of apps.
@@O_mores Really? How?
@@sqiuddyplays you can find in OMORES's videos.
Darn! That is so cool I must say!
Thanks for showing such awesome possibilities! :D
Any time!
Hey, these videos are amazing. However, I'd like to ask for a particular set of "old OS in new hardware", that instead of installing it directly to the hardware, rather through a VM, like KVM (proxmox for instance), or through VMware but without broken sound and horrible disk performance and such. That'll be amazing!
I have hunch that you won't see much VM action on this channel. My 2c. :)
XP: what kind of power this is!?
The ultimate kind of power😊
name of the song at 4:56?
Laxity - "The Alibi" soundcloud.com/c64er/the-alibi-by-laxity
I actually did this the other day with a 9600k z390 chipset.Integral Edition is my go to for xp. What custom iso settings/options would you recommend for ryzen? I havent been able to get that working right. Awesome video.
Hmm... I have a B450 motherboard with a Ryzen 2xxx CPU laying around I will transplant the NVMe from this video there... to see what happens. Intel USB drivers won't work for sure... :)) A while ago, I did install it on my Ryzen 3900X PC but I use a VIA 6421 PCI to SATA card which compatible with any Windows ever released...
Kind of awesome that microsoft made a 32 bit windows 7 driver for nvme, and that it was backported to windows xp. Amazing! Legacy mode and everything, SCSI device. I've never tried that!
Windows 7 was under warranty when NVME was launched. They had to do it. :) By the way: „Windows 7 End of Life date is 10th January 2023
End of Life (EOL), in software terms, means that a company no longer supports, updates, or patches that piece of software.”
@@max_MXX Let me correct you a bit: Windows 7's EOL ended on January 14th 2020. That's the date when it ceased it's extended support. January 10th 2023 is the date when 7 stopped getting additional security updates.
This is a really good video. I wish you could show more details about how you found the drivers that you integrated in the disc but it’s still very informative. I do have a question for you. I followed the link to the integral copy of windows Xp and it looks like everything that’s needed is already added to that iso. Am I right on my assumption? Or do we still need to look for drivers to make the install work?
Thank you for the video. I will help a lot of people out. 😊
The ISO you originally download has standard ACPI and no NVME drivers, it's more or less the original SP3 ISO released by Microsoft. Packed with the .ISO there is a folder with lots of subfolders and drivers. You use the Patch Integrator to add the needed drivers and to create a second custom .ISO. That's why you need the original .ISO in the first place, because the content is somewhat standardized and the patch integrator expects certain files with certain versions to be there.
Ahhh XP old days. Windows 3.1 and Windows NT 3.51/4.0 Windows 9x, XP and Vista on modern PC. What the music name in the video. Nice video man!
Thanks for watching! The tune is this one: soundcloud.com/c64er/the-alibi-by-laxity
Please make a video on how to enable NVIDIA HDMI HD Audio on Windows 2000.
This looks amazing! Some day, I will try to install Windows xp in my Ryzen laptop to see if it works
you can install XP for the sake of fun but it's unusable due to the lack of drivers.
better on a desktop as you can add compatible gpu and other cards to make up for lack of drivers, on a laptop you wont be getting to far on anything past 3rd gen i think? maybe 4/5th has gpu drivers idk
Great video and this can also work with the VIA Chipset Card and selecting the Microsoft drivers!!!
Thanks! Yes, you can install using VIA 6421 PCI to SATA adapter, the drivers are already included, you don't even need to use Patch Integrator if your computer is
Windows 2000 has ACPI too, which it doesn't work well native hardware on Z97 with NVMe SSD. Just have to use SATA only.
The only, I have to use Win 2000 slipstream installer along with service pack 4 unofficial. While it works well with USB 3.
Do you have a separate USB 3 adapter? I never managed to get USB 3 on Win 2K.
@@roberto88958 As long they are exists legacy controller of the PCIe USB cards, like realtek and maxwell controller
Damn and I thought I was fancy with my 4790K, NVME drive and GTX 780 Ti for my Windows XP rig.
Will the same options you chose for patch integrator work with any 12th/13th gen motherboard?
Yes, these options should work with any 12/13th Gen motherboard.
@@O_mores This awesome! Thanks for your immediate response.
i tired using an NVME drive as a secondary drive in windows xp with that nvme driver from the integral version but whenever id try to run crystal disk mark it could complete the read test but as soon as it would start writing to the drive the system would hard lock. same with just trying to copy files to the drive as soon as the copy would start the system would hard lock. tired with several drives adata/samsung/wd. this was with an older x58 motherboard within a pci-e to nvme adapter card tired a startech one and some no name one made no dif. same thing would happen to nvme drives in a usb encloser to.
What exact driver from Integral Edition? There are 5 NVMe drivers:
Intel NVMe driver v4.0.0.1007
Kai-Schtrom OFA NVMe driver v1.3
Samsung NVMe driver v3.3.0.2003
Microsoft NVMe driver v6.1.7601.23403
Silicon Motion NVMe driver v10.4.49.0
When I made this video I installed XP from SATA first but when I tried to load NVMe driver manually didn't work. Didn't spent much time to investigate so I reinstalled with a NVME ready custom ISO.
@@O_mores i tired the samsung one with a 970 pro. i also tired the microsoft one didn't seem to make a dif.
Installing NVME drivers using Device Manager didn't work for me either. I didn't spent much time in investigating this issue, I rather preferred to perform a fresh install. So my advice is to replicate the steps from this video and make that custom ISO and install XP directly on NVME.
@@O_mores would u be to provide iso u made up with the drivers all integrated ill give it try
@@mraaron1584 Sure, there you go: pinzaru.ro/windows9x/XP_youtube.iso
Wondering if you can somehow do it without burning and using a real CD? I tried bootable USB sticks using things like Easy2boot and failed
I have to check if it works with this specific ISO, but when it comes to XP 32bit you always can install it from DOS and not rely on USB at all. Check this video on how to install it from DOS: th-cam.com/video/xF0ApHpPh-o/w-d-xo.html
Why did you choose Microsoft USB3.x driver instead of AMD/Intel USB3.x driver?
I find Microsoft’s own drivers more stable overall-they’re designed to work on millions of computers, after all. They may not be the fastest option for USB 3, but they reliably get the job done.
@O_mores you're right. But I have a problem. When I try Microsoft AHCI driver, after the second phase of the setup, it gives 0x7b error (at phase 3). Other drivers directly gives 0x7b before installing. How can I solve this?
@@ages2001 In this video I installed it on a NVMe drive and it was surprisingly easy - the drive just showed up during the setup and no tweaking was required. I didn't tried the Microsoft AHCI driver on my socket 1700 configuration. I did use UniATA with XP on other configurations - and I know you are familiar with it. So I have get into this situation myself (to try so install with MS AHCI on a SATA drive) to give any insights.
@@O_mores I forgot UniATA driver lmao. It also supports WinXP 32-bit (but not 64-bit).
Do you have one for Windows 95? On a new computer.
Yes, here is a video about Windows 95 on modern hardware: th-cam.com/video/gTaUTx6xPE4/w-d-xo.html
I got disk read error, when I restarted the computer to continue setup in graphical form ):
On what configuration?
regarding the external kingston storage that went in usb, could you have had a bottleneck since you were still using 2.0? or were you already using 3.0?
At 300 megabytes per second we are definitely on the USB 3.0 territory. It's just a patched driver not meant for Windows XP - might gave better results with other Intel chipsets. But considering you don't have to do any fiddling to get USB 3.0 working... it's very good as it is... :)
@@O_mores am I already forgetting the speeds?.. oh boy... well thanks for the clarification
This is the easier option. Try to boot from NVME drive under classic BIOS on older mainboard.
You certainly can do it even on some older motherboards if you really want to, but it's not easy. You can flash the bootrom to a PCI/PCI-E Ethernet card, this way the drive will be initialized and you can boot from it. I knew people who done it this way. I would like to try it - but right now I don't have any PCI-E to nVME adapter.
@@O_mores I bought one myself from aliexpress. They have it very cheaply. It works very well on HP 800G1, but I had to mod UEFI to include NVME driver.
Do You have any links how to proceed with bootrom which You mentioned? (I already did something similar with XTIDE)
Sorry, I don't have any links. A while ago I ran into a topic on vogons.org where a dude flashed his 3COM card with a custom bootrom extracted from a Samsung drive. If I find that topic I will post a link in this thread.
Great tutorial... Let's see if it works or not..
If it's not working, leave a message so we can do some troubleshooting...
can you please help me? I have a weird issue, I used the patch integrator with winsetupfromusb, it boots, welcome screen, everything looks fine until pressing enter, the system instantly powers off without a error or warning, I have a lenovo Y700-17ISK, i7-6700HQ, lexar SSD NM710 1TB
I'm also gonna try all the "* Alternative Options:" NVMe drivers
It sounds like ACPI might be the issue if the system powers off unexpectedly. Try experimenting with different ACPI variants-starting with no ACPI changes. Keep in mind that newer ACPI options are designed for modern motherboards and your configuration is somewhere in between... Also you can press F5 and pick MPS multiprocessor this way ACPI won't be used at all. For me, the newer and default ACPI option from the patch integrator worked successfully on both an Intel H610 motherboard and an Intel Z790 motherboard: imgur.com/gallery/windows-xp-running-on-bare-metal-i5-14600kf-z790-motherboard-8fICm1E
Do you use Snappy Driver Installer Origin?
Actually I'm not using it very often, but it's nice tool, I especially appreciate it because it's portable.
Now pair with 980Ti and will be able to play mega sized, heavily modded Sim City 4 (once PAE patched for 4GB RAM) without days of lag.
Will be needing something like this for current OSes in 20 years, so we can do the same for City Skylines. Damn those juicy mods needing hardware that's decades away to properly enjoy 😀
Absolutely! The 980 Ti is a perfect match for Windows XP and it's actually the best card for older games, the world record in 3D Mark 2001 is held by 980TI (heavily overclocked, with custom cooling). I have a GTX 980 and it was so easy to install in XP.
@@O_mores No Quadro M6000 24GB?
Noob! 😉
I do have a few Quadros, but nothing high-end. Anyway I have two identical GTX 980s from Asus, I will try to setup them in SLI. According to nVidia it should work:
"The following SLI features are not supported on Windows XP:
Geforce GTX 680, 670 SLI
Quad SLI technology using GeForce GTX 590, GeForce 9800 GX2 or GeForce GTX 295
3-way SLI technology
Hybrid SLI
SLI multi-monitor support"
@@O_mores LOL, that would be awesome, micro-stutter hadn't been discovered back then, so it can't exist. That's how that works, right! Right? ... 😀
Ho provato per giorni con Ryzen. Non ci sono riuscito per i driver Achi
Bene, devi creare quell'ISO personalizzato come mostrato nel video. Il file .ISO scaricato originariamente non dispone di driver AHCI corretti. Utilizza l'integratore di patch per aggiungere driver e salvare la nuova ISO, quindi utilizzala.
@@retr_os Ci ho provato in tutti i modi. Mi da errore e di fare un chkdsk/f
Are you trying to install it from USB? That might be a problem... Use this procedure showed in this video: th-cam.com/video/xF0ApHpPh-o/w-d-xo.html
@@O_mores Ho provato anche da CD usb.. vado a vedere il video
Don't do it from USB, you'll get into trouble. Make a DOS bootable partition as shown in that video and start the installation from DOS.
thanks i can play gmod 12 now :)
Hi Omores
Great video!
Great video👍, but i've tried all the SATA AHCI drivers that are in the options, but I still get 0x00007b error..
Can you plz help me?😢
My brand is:
Lenovo™Yoga 520
Hello, what exact model of Lenovo Yoga do you have? These series were launched in 2012.
@@O_mores 81C8
So it has an Intel 7th gen CPU? Before dealing with SATA did you burn a custom ISO with patched ACPI?
@@O_mores Yes, instead of CD/DVD, I burnt it into a USB drive, cuz the laptop doesn't have a CD/DVD drive. But burning it into a USB drive doesn't work, cuz it just straight up don't boot, it just restarts. So I tried adding a Windows XP Setup ISO entry using EasyBCD (AHCI doesn't work). And also booting the ISO using Easy2Boot (AHCI works, but there are no hard drives detected). No matter how hard I tried, it just doesn't wanna work.
@MimosEpic You can install it from DOS, you have to copy the CD contents on your HDD/SSD and start the setup with winnt.exe from i386 folder. Here a video dealing with this procedure: th-cam.com/video/xF0ApHpPh-o/w-d-xo.html
sticker labels on cd's bad idea
Doc Brown: I foresee two possibilities. One: it may create a disequilibrium which might be fatal at high RPM. Or two, the encounter could create a time paradox, the result of which could cause a chain reaction that would unravel the very fabric of the space-time continuum and destroy the entire universe! Granted, that's worst-case scenario. The destruction might in fact be very localized, limited to merely our own galaxy.
Znaleziony program winXp to wirus, instalując go, instaluje się 35 programów. Wysypał mi w10 gdy próbowałem odinstalować programy ręcznie. Wyskakujące okna i tak jakby ktoś za mnie klikał. same akceptacje administratora. Ehh, teraz już muszę jakiś system postawić bo mam roslinke
So you downloaded a bad Windows XP ISO from somewhere?
Hello Omores
cool video!
I'm glad you like it!
Hi admin, I'm currently using Windows 11 on Ryzen 7 8700G, but I still have another PC unit Ryzen 5 3400G. I plan to operate this unit with Windows XP SP3, can you help me? The specifications are as follows: AMD Ryzen 5 3400G processor. Gigabyte GA A320M-S2H motherboard. 512gb NVme drive. 1TB SSD storage. 2x8gb DDR4 RAM. nVidia GTX 1660 Super.
How can I help you? I see that the GA-A320M-S2H mobo has TWO PS/2 ports which is great for installing any legacy OS. Just make the custom ISO as show in the video. Meanwhile I made another Windows XP video this time running on Intel 14600KF CPU + Asus Z790-P Prime WiFi Motherboard: th-cam.com/video/n6woUdZcJgE/w-d-xo.html so you check it out for more information.
Provide ISO
Check out the description, you'll find there a download link, and I think I covered in this video how must be used to get NVME, ACPI and USB 3 drivers on it.
Wanted to see hardcore gaming ❤
What is hardcore gaming? :)
Impressive
How do you solve the issue that sometime while downloading drivers XP ask you to insert the service pack disk (or usb in some case if installation was done with rufus)?
So far I didn't get into this situation. But I remember that in the early days of XP (with no service packs) when installing a USB keyboard or mouse - XP was showing up the driver installation dialog - asking you to press "Continue" - while your mouse and keyboard weren't installed yet. I installed XP for a friend using PS/2 mouse and keyboard, I brought him the PC - but he had only USB mouse and keyboard. He called me to bring him a PS/2 keyboard so he can install his USB keyboard...
Talking over constant music makes it very hard to pay attention to the narrator!
Noted, but in this particular video there is only a tiny portion with voice and music. Usually I prefer not to mix them.