![]() ![]() I’m GREAT at taking stuff apart but putting it back together and getting it to work again… that’s a different story. My father was deeply involved in early fiber optical research (you know, the research that led to today’s interconnected high speed world) but I couldn’t get through Freshman Physics. Truth be told I like the hardware on the Mini-Note a whole lot more than the Wind, but putting OS X on the Mini-Note is apparently still a work in progress so off I went… ![]() (Prior to this in order to get wifi working you needed to either use a WiFI dongle or open the machine up and swap in a different WiFi card.) (here is one exception- XP Tablet- but that is another post.) Then, earlier this week, I saw that RealTek had released a wifi driver that allowed the MSI Wind U100 to be “OX S-ified” without having to make any changes to the hardware. Yet after a few days using it I realized that as much as I loved the Mini-Note I hated being back on XP. Seriously, I absolutely loved the machine. From there I jumped into an HP Mini-Note 1000 and loved it. The trackpad did me in, however, and it went back. ![]() I had an Acer Aspire One for a week and was impressed with it on many levels. Three weeks ago, however, I decided to try again. When I made the shift to Mac a year and a half ago I figured I had left the whole “netbook-thing” behind- at least until Apple made their way into the arena with more than the iPhone and iPod Touch. Each was either returned or, more often, found their way to eBay in pristine condition. I loved the whole UMPC concept but none of the machines ever fit the bill quite well enough for me. I had a Samsung Q1P, Q1Ultra, Q1Ultra Premium and a Sony UX 280P in rapid succession. I had a TabletKiosk UMPC the day they were shipped. I’ve been through the whole UMPC thing from the start. Gear Diary neither recommends, nor takes any liability, if you choose to do the same.) It is not intended to recommend or encourage similar hacks. You can author one base Windows Installer package for a product and then multiple instance transforms that change the product code and manage data for each instance.įor more information, see Authoring Multiple Instances with Instance Transforms and Installing Multiple Instances with Instance Transforms.(Note- This post is done in order to share my experience creating a Hackintosh. ![]() Using instance transforms significantly reduces the effort needed to support multiple instances of a product. The only way to install more than one instance of a product with previous versions of the installer is to have a separate installation package for each instance. You can also use product code transforms to install multiple instances of a product with Windows 2000 with Service Pack 4 (SP4) and Windows Installer 3.0. Starting with the installer running Windows Server 2003 and Windows XP with Service Pack 1 (SP1), you can install multiple instances of a product by using product code transforms and one. Then each package can keep its own set of data and have its own unique product code. However, you can install multiple instances of a product if you have a separate installation package for each instance of a product or patch. The Windows Installer cannot install multiple instances of products using concurrent installations. If a product code remains unchanged, only one instance can be installed in the machine context and only one instance can be installed in each user context.įor multiple instances to remain isolated, they must have different product codes and cannot share file data or nonfile data. Windows Installer permits one instance of a product code to be installed per context, and the two possible types of context are the following: ![]()
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