Pretty well done, although i use Unetbootin Instead. Probably the annoying thing is after it's leaving behind another boot menu in grub or either Windows boot manager.
when you created and extracted the tar archive did you copy the premisions over, more importantly the executable bits? this is just a theorie, sorry for my bad english.
3:50 the /sbin/init was missing, the workaround would be adding a symlink (/sbin/init -> /sbin/<yourinitsystem>) or you could go to grub and edit the boot configuration for arch linux by adding "init=/sbin/<yourinitsystem>"
@@SevoosChannel init system is what basically starts up the services the first time you boot, in this case, for arch linux, it is systemd, but i don't know if it is just /sbin/systemd or something different (i'm using openrc)
I recognize some of these commands, as I had to do them about 1000 times and I used a total of 4 or 5 ISOs (NTLite.iso, Windows 7.iso, Windows 7 with slipstreamed drivers....iso, Flash.iso, etc.). I also saw these commands repeated a lot in the Reddit Chat: diskpart sel vol 3 format fs=fat32 quick ass letter u exit bcdboot C:\Windows /s U: bcdboot A:\Windows /s U: wpeutil reboot Switch to AHCI for Windows 7 and RAID for Windows 11.
I just wanna know why the first song is so cool. It's like an awesome metal band did a concert inside my old SNES. This song never decided if it wants to be EDM or metal.
I may be talking nonsense, but this plasma installation is a bit fake for me, firstly you didn't install sddm, nor did you activate its startup via systemctl, and when you did the first boot, the welcome screen didn't appear
okay so the first time I did it it installed perfectly. I reinstall it, the bootloader has the incorrect resolution (like it did in the video) and it did not boot! any ideas?
@@SevoosChannel no no it booted from the iso PERFECTLY fine the first time with the correct resolution on the exact same hardware I am trying right now. It still looks like flashboot applied but it is stuck on loading. Also I noticed that it doesn't show "setup is updating registry settings"
Why would anyone even watch something related to Windows for practical usefulness? Jokes off, if some poor soul ever wants to run Windows 7 natively on its modern computer, it could be useful
Idk what kind of a way did the guy use to install arch and if he got it working on baremetal, but arch linux in of itself is well capable of running windows apps within wine/proton, or windows on virtual machines(being the most impressive ones on kvm with gpu-passthrough).
I doubt VMWare would act like Nintendo with a micro channel... Anyway, it's not monetized yet. Also, I just find VirtualBox more convenient at: switching from guest to host; .vhd support; Guest additionals - local VMWare tools - compatibility with older OSes