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If you need to troubleshoot it's creation look at the CreateTSMedia.log file in your confmgr LOGS dir. Now your selected boot image and distribution point are listed, click next to continue through the wizard
#WINDOWS 10 IMAGE CAPTURE PRO#
Note: if you are trying to capture 圆4 UEFI hardware such as the Microsoft Surface Pro 3, you must use a 圆4 boot wim.Ĭlick ok, then click on Browse beside Distribution Point When the Create Task Sequence Media wizard appears click on Capture MediaĬlick next and browse to the path of where you want to store the ISO file, give it a name like capture_media.isoĬlick next, then click on browse beside boot image In the ribbon click on Create Task Sequence Media
#WINDOWS 10 IMAGE CAPTURE SOFTWARE#
Open the ConfigMgr console, click on Software Library, Operating Systems, expand Task Sequences.
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Perform the following on the Configuration Manager server as a SMSadmin. I'd recommend you use Virtual Machines (Hyperv, Vmware Workstation) or whatever virtual software you like to create the 'image' you want to capture. Keeping a computer off the domain before capturing it, eliminates these and other potential issues.
![windows 10 image capture windows 10 image capture](https://res.cloudinary.com/aventistech/image/upload/v1589077891/MDT-Capture-11.png)
Settings get applied when you join a domain, such as Group Policies are set, software may be installed, registry keys might be changed. Tip: It's recommended that you build your master image without joining a domain as domain join can impact an image and make troubleshooting problems that occur later on, harder. In order for the image to be captured the computer must be a member of a Workgroup, In other words, the machine you want to capture the image from must not be joined to a domain. But first you need to make sure that the image you want to capture is in the right state, listed below This media is created as an ISO file which you burn directly to CD/DVD or mount in a virtual machine and use. In this post however, I'll explain how you can capture an image manually and Configuration Manager 2012 provides a method of doing just that called Capture Media. So if for example you want to capture a reference image you could do so using a fully automated Build and Capture task sequence in System Center 2012 R2 Configuration Manager. Normally you would want to automate building your reference image using Configuration Manager or MDT or a mixture of both.