What follows is what I did in the end to get things running. A series of MS blogs also gave me a bit better understanding of their usage: this, this, and this. It pointed me towards investigating VHD and dism. Select ISO file> Next, and the tool will create. Download Notepad++ which gives you numbered lines in txt files and edit the HWIDActivation.cmd at lines 679 and 761-763 as mentioned above. Select the language, architecture, and edition of Windows, you need and select Next. If you are activating Windows 10 IoT Enterprise LTSC 2021: MAS 1.4 is an activator which contains a file called HWIDActivation.cmd, which fails if not modified. In the tool, select Create installation media (USB flash drive, DVD, or ISO) for another PC> Next. This post from a year and a half ago gave me another view as it goes over running IoT Core in VMWare. On the Windows 10 download page, download the media creation tool by selecting Download tool now, then run the tool.
But, between using some tool from the XNA developer forums and glossing over several details I started looking for other sources. The Windows 10 IoT Enterprise custom guide provides instructions and labs on how to build, customize, and deploy an enterprise image that meets your application. This blog post seems to be referenced numerous places as the reference to get an x86/圆4 ISO of IoT Core running in a VM. The hardware compatibility list deserves special mention here because there is far more RaspPi accessories available than are actually supported by Win10.įor various reasons I'm not going to have hardware for over a month, so I'm trying to give things a whirl via virtualbox. Since the rest of our platform is running on Windows 10 IoT Enterprise (aka Windows 10 Enterprise LTSB), I thought I'd give IoT Core a look in the hopes that almost no porting would be required. Copy the custom image install.wim created before to the Source folder and replace the original one.
You can also mount a Windows 10 ISO and copy its content.
For example, copy them to a folder named iso-files located on D: drive. Copy its contents and paste to a folder on your internal or external hard drive. Recently been looking at using a Raspberry Pi 3 for a modestly work-related project. Open Windows 10 installation disc in File Explorer.