By the way, how is the result of the executed DOS command (CMD) converted into the following text format ? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ how is the result of the executed DOS command (CMD) converted into the following text format ? Regarding my question, Self-solved in the following way The command prompt has a screen buffer that records logs that have scrolled off the screen. To save the log as text, select and paste the part of the log you want to save from the screen buffer. 1.Click the command prompt icon at the right end of the title bar. 2.Select [Edit (E)]-[Mark (K)] and select the character string to be copied. 3.Select [Edit (E)]-[Copy (Y)] to copy the text to the clipboard. 4.Paste with CTRL + V in the copy destination text editor. In Windows 10, the command prompt (cmd.exe) has been enhanced to make it easier to use. Copy and paste operations using CTRL + C / CTRL + V, which is the standard Windows method, can now be used at the command prompt.
The info you show is lacking all info about what you did and what actually ran. These ISOs installed fine: https://forums.mydigitallife.net/th...10-uups-with-ease.75052/page-155#post-1560123 So, all should be OK, as long as there were no errors during the process.
Not really a difference, it's just one small update more to integrate and an update that only gets extracted and copied to the ISOFOLDER\Sources folder.
Dude, you always answer me with something like above "not really a difference". Which one should I choose for the: least amount of data downloaded least work (cpu/ram/ssd) on my pc
When i say "not really a difference" i mean not really a difference... 14MB data download difference, no mentionable difference in system usage.
If the end result is exactly the same why don't save those 14 megs and no mentionable difference in system usage. So which one is it (the lighter)?
The cumulative update option lacks the du for safeos and du for sources The feature update option includes those 2 updates, 14MB more download and a few seconds more integration time
I am using Windows 10 Enterprise (1909) x64 to create the ISO. So I am using this script: 18363.476_amd64_en-us_all_1ceda46e_convert This results in a ISO called: 18362.476_amd64_en-us_all_1ceda46e_convert.iso In the blue prompt I see: Image Version: 10.0.18362.1 when patching the WIM file