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Timothy Daniels
October 24th 05, 09:29 AM
Is "slipstreaming" SP2 with the installation CD for WinXP
significantly faster than just installing WinXp and then
running the SP2 CD? I have only one machine to do this
on, and I was wondering if the time saved was worth
learning the slipstream procedure and burning a CD
since I already have SP2 on a CD from Microsoft.

*TimDaniels*

NoNoBadDog!
October 24th 05, 09:33 AM
"Timothy Daniels" > wrote in message
...
> Is "slipstreaming" SP2 with the installation CD for WinXP
> significantly faster than just installing WinXp and then
> running the SP2 CD? I have only one machine to do this
> on, and I was wondering if the time saved was worth
> learning the slipstream procedure and burning a CD
> since I already have SP2 on a CD from Microsoft.
>
> *TimDaniels*

The answer should be rather obvious. You save the time it takes to install
the SP2 CD on your machine, plus you can use the SP2 CD for repair
installations. If you install from a pre-SP2 CD, then install SP2, you
cannot run a repair installation or a repair console from the windows CD.

Bobby

Torgeir Bakken \(MVP\)
October 24th 05, 09:34 AM
Timothy Daniels wrote:

> Is "slipstreaming" SP2 with the installation CD for WinXP
> significantly faster than just installing WinXp and then
> running the SP2 CD? I have only one machine to do this
> on, and I was wondering if the time saved was worth
> learning the slipstream procedure and burning a CD
> since I already have SP2 on a CD from Microsoft.
Hi,

I absolutely recommend you to slipstream SP2 into your OS CD.

Use AutoStreamer or nLite to make the process pretty easy.

AutoStreamer:

Create a Slip Stream version of Windows XP
http://www.webtree.ca/windowsxp/slipstream.htm

nLite:

Universal Windows Slipstreaming and Bootable CD Guide
http://www.msfn.org/articles.php?action=show&showarticle=49




--
torgeir, Microsoft MVP Scripting, Porsgrunn Norway
Administration scripting examples and an ONLINE version of
the 1328 page Scripting Guide:
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/scriptcenter/default.mspx

Tom Porterfield
October 24th 05, 11:35 AM
On Mon, 24 Oct 2005 01:29:06 -0700, Timothy Daniels wrote:

> Is "slipstreaming" SP2 with the installation CD for WinXP
> significantly faster than just installing WinXp and then
> running the SP2 CD? I have only one machine to do this
> on, and I was wondering if the time saved was worth
> learning the slipstream procedure and burning a CD
> since I already have SP2 on a CD from Microsoft.

Whether or not it's faster in the large context depends on how often you
will use it. You have to take the time to get a tool to create the
slipstream, or learn how to do it manually. Then you have to do the
slipstream. Both of those things take time. If you never use the
slipstreamed CD then it wasn't faster to do that. However if you do use
it, it is significantly faster as during the single install you get both
Windows XP and SP2 installed simultaneously. So from that standpoint, the
install process is as much faster as it would take to just install SP2 on
your PC.
--
Tom Porterfield
MS-MVP Windows
http://support.telop.org

Please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup only.

R. McCarty
October 24th 05, 11:43 AM
Also, doing a "Slipstreamed" install lowers the disk space on the XP
partition since there won't be a "ServicePackFiles" with the ~500+
Megabytes of updated content.

"Tom Porterfield" > wrote in message
...
> On Mon, 24 Oct 2005 01:29:06 -0700, Timothy Daniels wrote:
>
>> Is "slipstreaming" SP2 with the installation CD for WinXP
>> significantly faster than just installing WinXp and then
>> running the SP2 CD? I have only one machine to do this
>> on, and I was wondering if the time saved was worth
>> learning the slipstream procedure and burning a CD
>> since I already have SP2 on a CD from Microsoft.
>
> Whether or not it's faster in the large context depends on how often you
> will use it. You have to take the time to get a tool to create the
> slipstream, or learn how to do it manually. Then you have to do the
> slipstream. Both of those things take time. If you never use the
> slipstreamed CD then it wasn't faster to do that. However if you do use
> it, it is significantly faster as during the single install you get both
> Windows XP and SP2 installed simultaneously. So from that standpoint, the
> install process is as much faster as it would take to just install SP2 on
> your PC.
> --
> Tom Porterfield
> MS-MVP Windows
> http://support.telop.org
>
> Please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup only.

Rick
October 25th 05, 03:08 AM
Not quite accurate. If you have a pre SP2 CD then you must un install
SP2 and perform the repair then re install SP2.

Rick

NoNoBadDog! wrote:
> "Timothy Daniels" > wrote in message
> ...
>
>>Is "slipstreaming" SP2 with the installation CD for WinXP
>>significantly faster than just installing WinXp and then
>>running the SP2 CD? I have only one machine to do this
>>on, and I was wondering if the time saved was worth
>>learning the slipstream procedure and burning a CD
>>since I already have SP2 on a CD from Microsoft.
>>
>>*TimDaniels*
>
>
> The answer should be rather obvious. You save the time it takes to install
> the SP2 CD on your machine, plus you can use the SP2 CD for repair
> installations. If you install from a pre-SP2 CD, then install SP2, you
> cannot run a repair installation or a repair console from the windows CD.
>
> Bobby
>
>
>

Plato
October 25th 05, 03:49 AM
Timothy Daniels wrote:
>
> Is "slipstreaming" SP2 with the installation CD for WinXP
> significantly faster than just installing WinXp and then
> running the SP2 CD? I have only one machine to do this
> on, and I was wondering if the time saved was worth
> learning the slipstream procedure and burning a CD
> since I already have SP2 on a CD from Microsoft.

I like just using the MS XP SP2 Upgrade CD to get XP w/sp2 on PCs.




--
http://www.bootdisk.com/

Tom Porterfield
October 25th 05, 08:40 PM
Rick wrote:
> Not quite accurate. If you have a pre SP2 CD then you must un install
> SP2 and perform the repair then re install SP2.

Not at all. There is no need to uninstall SP2 before doing a repair
install with a pre-SP2 CD.
--
Tom Porterfield
MS-MVP Windows
http://support.telop.org

Please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup only.

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