![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() In the end, we did another brand new USB key with the iso, and it worked, thank god. I was going to attempt to put the iso on DVD but Microsoft in all their wisdom has created and installation media that doesn't fit on the most common capacities of dvd installation medias - choosing to bundle 32-bit and 64-bit into a single iso, making the iso installer pain in the ass because it doesn't fit on a DVD! Now, having to stay overnight at my mothers to complete the task, great. So I allowed "Media Creation tool" to make the usb key, it did so too without complaint, and ended up with the same message "missing files", awesome. Setup failed again now with a different message "missing files". Using Rufus, I 'burned' the iso to a different usb key. ![]() So, I went to Microsoft's site, and downloaded the ISO manually - using Chrome on Linux it let me download the ACTUAL iso file (more on this later about how it redirected to the "media creation tool" whenever I tried to download via a Windows 10 installation (the old computers OS). Windows Media Creation Tool es la herramienta perfecta para instalar Windows 10 sin complicaciones, de forma segura y con el soporte oficial de Microsoft. So firstly the usb key that came with our retail copy of Windows didn't work out of the box, setup hung "Loading Files" repeatedly. Recently I had to install Windows 10 on my mothers computer (she refuses to transition to anything else other than Windows because it's what she knows). To download the Windows Installation Media Tool, visit here(Windows 10) or here(Windows 11) and scroll down till you see two purple Download Tool Nowbuttons. I use Linux, it works, and when it doesn't I KNOW WHY. Let me start by saying I actively avoid Microsoft anything to begin with. ![]()
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