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#1
Trying to install Windows on SD Card
First of all, hi everybody! As you'll probably see from my post count, I'm new to sevenforums.com. I need help about a totally crazy thing, but I'm pretty sure on doing it, already read some pros and cons and heard some people about it.
The action is already pretty explained in the title. Now I'm gonna tell you the reason. Windows isn't my principal operating system. I already have a Linux Mint install that fulfills all my needs. I'd want a Windows system too just for gaming, if I manage to do my way. Id est on a Secure Digital I bought for that exact reason. Why? I don't want Windows to occupy space on my HDD, which is barely big enough for my needs, and I don't want to carry around an external drive either. An SD is perfect for has all the space it needs on its own, is small and confortable to bring where I want and when it's plugged in completely disappears in my computer.
First overcame obstacle, my laptop is a pretty new semi-ultrabook one, which means in order to be more light and thin has got no optical drive. I managed to create a bootable USB install drive from another x64 system using Windows 7 USB/DVD download tool, downloading an official SP1 iso image to activate.
The problem is Windows does not want me to put it on an external USB drive, nor a pen, an hard disk or a Secure Digital, which is my case (my laptop's card reader seem to be connected via USB). That probably because it's a bad idea, but I made my decision, and I'm not going to get Windows either way. I will activate it buying a license only if it can fit to an SD, elseway I'm gonna resign myself not to have a gaming system on my laptop and stick with LMDE alone.
One idea I came with was temporarily install Win7 on a partition I difficultly manage to cut out of my HDD, and then copy the entire partition on my SD. Except I can't manage to boot from it. That maybe because some boot system options refer to absolute and not reltive paths, so that moving it elsewhere miserably fails, or due to the fact that my SD is seen as E: drive from my Windows install, but is the C: partition of the SD itself, creating a nice drive letter conflict.
What I tried to boot from it is: creating a custom option with EasyBCD, marking the partition as active with bcdboot from an elevated command prompt (bcdboot c:\windows /s e:), and using bootsect this way:
Any help appreciated. Ask for any system detail needed or for any plan or legal soubt. Have a good day, everyone!Code:bootsect /nt60 e: /mbr