10gb .iso burn to usb

Solution
Hey there, Kaladan.

This article should be able to help with your issue: https://blogs.technet.microsoft.com/odsupport/2011/04/19/how-to-extract-the-contents-from-an-iso-file-without-burning-the-iso-to-disc/. Unless you have the file on the same flash drive, then you'll have to move it to a different drive in order to free up some space and then extract the files you need.

Hope that helps.
Boogieman_WD
Hey there, Kaladan.

This article should be able to help with your issue: https://blogs.technet.microsoft.com/odsupport/2011/04/19/how-to-extract-the-contents-from-an-iso-file-without-burning-the-iso-to-disc/. Unless you have the file on the same flash drive, then you'll have to move it to a different drive in order to free up some space and then extract the files you need.

Hope that helps.
Boogieman_WD
 
Solution

Kaladan

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Thanks for that Boogieman. Very informative, however I think my problem is the .iso file is not standard as various programs I tried since say it cannot be opened though it appears to be uncorrupted. Bit odd.
 

USAFRet

Titan
Moderator


Where did this iso come from?
If you are just trying to install Win 10 from a USB, start here:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/software-download/windows10/
 

Kaladan

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Kaladan

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Hi USAFRet
It's a driver program drp_17.7.4_offline download from
http://getintopc.com/softwares/drivers-softwares/driverpack-solution-17-4-5-final-2016-iso-free-download/
I need an offline version to get the net card driver working on another comp. Guess I'll have to do it the harder way.
 

USAFRet

Titan
Moderator


Oh, I'm sorry. I saw "10", and thought you were talking about Win 10.

10GB of drivers?!? What the hell is that?
Something is not right with that.

Drivers should come directly from the manufacturer. Not 'getintopc'. And 10GB is about 10,000 times too large.
 

Kaladan

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Kaladan

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Yes, that iso has every driver they could think of I'd say! Thought it'd be easier than dissecting the comp & finding the data to get actual drivers from OEM. Then the cure became the problem & I got sidetracked into trying to find an answer to what should be simple, alas. As that's not the case I'll move on now. Thanks for your input.
 
@USAFRet is correct. The best source for your drivers would be either the website of the computer's manufacturer (if it's OEM), or check the websites of the manufacturer of each individual component e.g. GPU, motherboard, etc.

Since you've mentioned OEM I assume it's a laptop or a pre-build PC, if this is the case you should be able to check out it's specs from the manufacturer's website, by searching for the specific model you have. From then on if you don't want the OEM drivers, you could continue your search with the hardware manufacturers' website.
 

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