jaclaz, on 19 March 2010 - 01:31 PM, said:
GrofLuigi, on 19 March 2010 - 07:22 AM, said:
Alas, after some hours playing with the trial, I realized it's nothing more than a Vista SP2.1 and wiped it, ran out with screaming to buy some anti-bloat soap to wash my mouth. Sadly, there was none.

Yep, that's the reason why the stick approach is useful, how come you didn't use it this time?
http://www.msfn.org/...ic=125258&st=11
I was weak.

But I was healed pretty fast.
jaclaz, on 21 March 2010 - 08:35 AM, said:
DigeratiPrime, on 19 March 2010 - 02:04 PM, said:
It probably works because the active system volume is now a hidden 100 MB partition, which is actually assigned the letter C according to diskpart in WinPE.
GrofLuigi, on 19 March 2010 - 07:22 AM, said:
Installed on a primary partition (but not the first one) - dual boot.
jaclaz
Yes, that's probably the reason, but I found it pretty amazing that it changed the drive letter from Windows itself, on the fly (not sure if it asked for reboot and/or did some work after the next reboot).
I can't check now, but I think it saw the C: partition with XP at install time, and it gave its partition the letter F:, so I wanted every installation to refer to itself as C: so I could "transplant" programs (copy them without installation).
My partitions were (as seen from XP):
C: (xp)
D: (data)
F: (win7)
After installation of 7, and when booted into 7, they were:
C: (xp)
D: (data)
F: (win7) (I think, maybe D: and F: were swapped)
I wanted to make them:
C: (win7)
D: (data)
F: (xp)
Maybe there was an extra step to rename another letter (D:), but I couldn't believe my eyes when it let me reassign the letter it was residing on and booted into.
No partition was ever hidden.
GL