InterviewSolution
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Solve : Ninite.? |
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Answer» Im sure there are a ton of people who have seen this tool before but I did a forum search and it did not appear anywhere. Even if I expose this to 1 new person I THINK it helps. Often times we get a lot of users who come into the chat and have to do a fresh install and a lot of time I like to reccomend https://ninite.com/. Pretty neat tool that goes through a list of commonly used programs and installs them through one package. I personally use it often as it skips the tool bars and bloatware that can be added when doing a manual install.Ive used it before, but instead of having to rebuild fresh each time i have to rebuild a system, I build my system back from an image through a drive to drive clone process using Macrium Reflect. If you are not setting off to the side a spare hard drive with a clean build to be able to revert back from a image, then ninite works good. I havent used it much though because I install spare hard drives in my desktop computers to keep as a quick system recovery. It pays to do your research...nLite was the original. It does indeed.... But even a cursory look shows the two programs do completely different tasks. nLite is for slipstreaming software and drivers into Windows Installation media. It is called NTLite for the more recent versions, supporting Vista through Windows 10. Ninite is basically intended to allow installing applications without having the included adware or other required "UNCHECK this" stuff. (Toolbars, etc.) Has nothing to do with preparing ISO's or slipstreaming. Using nlite/vlite/ntlite to slipstream ninite onto an install is apparently fairly common- you slipstream ninite then as part of post-install, and then have niinite handle installing desired software, rather than slipstreaming a bunch of applications onto the media. Personally, if I was to use something like that, I'd rather not rely on a commercial product, since it feels very "Open sourcey" (eg apt-get on Linux). So I'd probably use Chocolatey. The only contention i have is you seemed to pigeon-hole into strictly a tool for slipstreaming drivers into a Win install.. Used properly it could do all the above listed...and was much cleaner doing so.Could you explain what you mean? both nLite and NTLite appear to be quite clearly deployment tools intended for creating custom installation media. If you want to call that pigeonholing, well, that is on nLite then, since it states directly that it "will guide you through the process of building a custom Windows installation" and if you select an invalid Folder for the Windows Install Media, it will have a message which includes "nLite is for a pre-install environment only, meaning that it cannot modify an existing Windows installation." There is no automated database where you can check off Firefox or Skype and have it added; you add the executables. of course, you can have them run silently or without adware with the right switches, but it's not an updating tool. The closest I can seem to determine is that NTLite allows a mounted deployment image to have software installed on a running system. eg a WIM that you added Firefox or Skype or Chrome or whatever to can have that installed directly to a running system. But I cannot find any way to, say, have software updated in some automatic fashion, which is part of the purpose of ninite. |
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