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Showing content with the highest reputation on 01/11/2017 in all areas

  1. Hello, Mise à jour de janvier. Attention, depuis le début de l'année WTK 1.5.4.x ne semble plus prendre en charge l'intégration des ISOs de Windows 10. Intégrez les mises à jour avec un script via DISM ou un autre programme...
    1 point
  2. bphlpt

    Silent Install Switches

    To help you a little bit with silent installers, let's get a bit more basic first. When you install an app, any app,the default behavior is usually to do as you implied above - click Install, Next, Next, change any options you want, Next, ..., Finish, and sometimes Restart. All very interactive, with maybe the chance to change options, etc. All well and good, but there are two main problems folks have with that method: [1] Even if you were willing to accept all the default options you still had to do all of that darn clicking which was annoying and took extra time and raised the slight possibility for you to click the wrong thing in your haste, and [2] If you wanted to install applications during an OS install then you had to physically be there to do all that clicking which kind of defeated the whole "unattended" approach that you might want so you could have it all done for you while you were at lunch or something. If you get rid of the need for the clicking, then the installation of the app is considered "unattended", but that doesn't mean it is necessarily silent. You could still have progress screens show which would let you know how things are going with the install and so you could figure out about how much time is left with the app install IF you were familiar with that particular app's install process. Some people like to see that. Depending on the circumstances it gives sort of a sense of comfort that things are progressing normally. If you get rid of the need to do the clicking and you also get rid of any display or interaction with the user whatsoever, then the installation is considered "silent". If an app is silent it is automatically also unattended, but if it is unattended that does not necessarily mean it is silent, understand? For an app to be able to be installed either unattended or silently, it can be given that option by the app creator or by someone else who repacks it. As I said above, the normal way to install an app is to click on "install" or "setup". For an app to be installed either unattended or silently it usually has to be invoked through the command line, not by clicking on something. These days, there are enough folks who want to install apps either unattended or silently, such as in a business situation installing many computers, that many app creators build those options in, but not all do. Some apps do not have those options built in, and for those apps there is no tool, not even Win Toolkit, that can install that app as it is silently. That is one reason why someone else might repack an app. Another reason to repack an app is to slim it down by removing undesired toolbars, or desktop shortcuts, or unneeded runtimes, etc. there are other reasons but that's enough for now. Some apps are relatively easy to repack and others are a real bear to do, if they can be done at all. Anyway, just because an app can be installed unattended or silently does not mean that the commands to do so are exactly the same. Just look at the first post and throughout this thread to see the different syntax and options necessary for the various apps to be installed silently. IF the version of the app that you want to install can be installed silently, and IF the commands, or switches, to do so are known, and IF Lego has that information, and IF he has added it to the current version of Win Toolkit, then and only then will you probably be able to install that version of the app easily and silently using Win Toolkit's Silent Installers tab. If you know the switches then you can manually add them even if Win Toolkit doesn't already know them, but that's one more thing you have to do manually. And if the app does not have the option available then you're out of luck. It will probably be easier and more reliable to install those apps manually after the OS is installed. That's a simplification of the situation, but I hope you now see that just because you want to install an app silently doesn't mean you can necessarily do so using Win Toolkit or any other tool. I'll let others respond to your particular questions. By the way, many folks still like to install apps silently even after the OS is installed just to avoid all of the darn clicking. Cheers and Regards
    1 point
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