Descargar Windows Xp Sp4 Final Espanol Iso Booteable
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I am going through an agonizing re-install, on day three now of Windows Updates, VS Service Packs, etc. It's been tough having to download all this again on a 384kbps ADSL line.
Windows Xp Sp4 Final
Besides the installs that I explicitly download, how can I back up installs such as all the Windows Updates; SQL Server 2008 Express that installs through Web Platform Installer, and any other goodies that MS deem to be better left uncontrolled by me?
ADDENDUM: Many people are giving answers that involved downloading. My whole point is to avoid downloading again what Windows already has downloaded.
10 Answers
http://www.wsusoffline.net/ This is what i use as part of my toolkit - it downloads everything and has a front end that automatically patches up a box. The neat thing about it is you can pick as many of as few products as you need, and it'll apply only the ones you need.
Windows XP is currently under legacy products, and since WSUS offline updates directly downloads the updates off MS, this may stop working when MS stops hosting patches, some time in the future.
EDIT: As of 2014, support for XP has been dropped on new updates of WSUS offline updates - You can find the last version that supports this, 9.2.1 in their archives.
Perhapsnlite would be useful?
nLite is a tool for pre-installation Windows configuration and component removal at your choice. Optional bootable image ready for burning on media or testing in virtual machines. With nLite you will be able to have Windows installation which on install does not include, or even contain on media, the unwanted components.
Features
If you are talking about a single machine/hardware config, you could make an image of the system using any of the many system imaging programs, then just re-deploy the image whenever you want to do a full re-install.
If you're mainly talking about Windows, you could slipstream the various updates into an updated installer disc.
This is the best officially supported solution
Step 1 - Download and install SP3:
Take a look at the Service Pack Center to find the download link for the latest Service pack.
From everything I've read, Service Pack 3 will be the last service pack to be released for XP.
Step 2 - Fetch the latest security updates (released after SP3)
Take a look at the Microsoft Security Bulletin Search tool to determine which updates you'll need to download.
Here are the settings I recommend to get all of the relevant updates after post-SP3
Then it's just a matter of downloading the relevant install executables for offline use.
Note: While I would personally choose to use the WSUSOffline tool that @Journeyman suggested, there are risks of using an unofficial tool to support Microsoft products. Downloads that come from third parties may contain malicious code so Microsoft may push to get a third party tool shutdown overnight if it deems the tool unsafe for its users. WSUSOffline gets around that by downloading the actual updates directly from Microsoft but as with all unofficial tools, convenience comes with risk.
Make all the downloads, install and updates that you want. Get a backup and burn it. This will be the easiest method.
You can also use nLite.
Have you ever wanted to remove Windows components like Media Player, Internet Explorer, Outlook Express, MSN Explorer, Messenger.. How about not even to install them with Windows ?
nLite is a tool for pre-installation Windows configuration and component removal at your choice. Optional bootable image ready for burning on media or testing in virtual machines. With nLite you will be able to have Windows installation which on install does not include, or even contain on media, the unwanted components.
I think you have to get the packages manually and save them somewhere. I think the best you can do is install the latest xp service pack and visual studio service packs and then use windows updates to grab the updates released since then. I think you'll need xp service pack 2 and xp service pack 3. You could grab each hotfix/update separately as well if you wanted, but that is probably a lot of work. I'd have thought setting windows update to autiomatic and just letting it go through and update woulod be the easiest
some instructions here
You need to download the offline install packages.
As suggested above use nLite in order to prepare an updated XP iso or dvd.Apart from slipstreaming sp3 you can also integrate some hotfixes or even microsoft programs,such as IE or WMP.
However a lot of hotfixes won't be integrated, so you will have to run a batch to finish the job.A good basis for building your 'perfect' xp installer is pre-SP4 project:http://dimadr.ru/critical-pre-sp4-eng
and for .NET
IMHO, it is possible to reuse updates already downloaded, but, although their files are expanded on c:windowssoftwaredistributiondownload
, one must find a way to recover installation scripts and install order to know what to do with them.
Have you already wiped the drive you are installing to? If so, then no, there is no way to avoid having to re-download the updates. If you have not wiped it (check the drive to see if there the previous Windows
directory has been renamed as a backup), then you can probably avoid re-downloading a lot of it.
Open C:WindowsSoftwareDistributionDownload
(replacing C:Windows
with the path to your old Windows directory).
You will find a bunch of files with a long alphanumeric name and no extension. These are the updates (and miscellaneous files). What you need to do is to figure out which ones are executable and run them. You could try using a hex-editor or something to open and view them, but it is much easier to just rename them.
First make sure that extensions are shown (Tools->Folder Options->View->de-select Hide extensions for known file types). Now for each file in the Download
directory, rename it, adding .EXE
to the end and then run it. (Consider creating a temporary folder to move them into after running them to make it easier to keep track of your progress.)
You will likely find that some of them crash and give an error message. Don’t worry about this since not all of the files in there are actually executable files, some are text files containing licences agreements, etc.
Once you have run all of the updates, reboot the system and run Windows Update again. You should find that fewer (if any?) updates are listed (it depends on how many were still in the Download
directory).
protected by Community♦Jun 27 '14 at 11:59
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Developer | Microsoft |
---|---|
OS family | Windows NT |
Source model |
|
Initial release | April 25, 2005; 14 years ago[1] |
Latest release | Service Pack 2 (5.2.3790.3959) / March 13, 2007; 12 years ago |
Kernel type | Hybrid kernel |
Default user interface | Graphical user interface |
License | |
Official website | windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows-xp/setup/windows-xp-professional-x64-edition-overview |
Support status | |
Mainstream support ended on April 14, 2009.[2] Extended support ended on April 8, 2014.[2] |
Descargar Windows Xp Sp4 Final Espanol Iso Booteable
Part of a series on |
Windows XP |
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Microsoft Windows XP Professional x64 Edition, released on April 25, 2005, is an edition of Windows XP for x86-64 personal computers. It is designed to use the expanded 64-bit memory address space provided by the x86-64 architecture.[1]
The primary benefit of moving to 64-bit is the increase in the maximum allocatable random-access memory (RAM). 32-bit editions of Windows XP are limited to a total of 4 gigabytes. Although the theoretical memory limit of a 64-bit computer is about 16 exabytes (17.1 billion gigabytes), Windows XP x64 is limited to 128GB of physical memory and 16 terabytes of virtual memory.[3]
Windows XP Professional x64 Edition uses the same kernel and code tree as Windows Server 2003[4] and is serviced by the same service pack.[5] However, it includes client features of Windows XP such as System Restore, Windows Messenger, Fast User Switching, Welcome Screen, Security Center and games, which Windows Server 2003 does not have.
Windows XP Professional x64 Edition is not to be confused with Windows XP 64-Bit Edition as the latter was designed for Itanium architecture.[6][7] During the initial development phases, Windows XP Professional x64 Edition was named Windows XP 64-Bit Edition for 64-Bit Extended Systems.[8]
Advantages[edit]
- Supports up to 128GB of RAM.[9]
- Supports up to two physical CPUs (in separate physical sockets) and up to 64 logical processors (i.e. cores or threads on a single CPU). As such, As of 2014, the OS supports all commercially available multicore CPUs, including Intel Core series, or AMD FX series.
- Uses the Windows Server 2003 kernel which is newer than 32-bit Windows XP and has improvements to enhance scalability.[10] Windows XP Professional x64 Edition also introduces Kernel Patch Protection (also known as PatchGuard) which can help improve security by helping to eliminate rootkits.[11]
- Supports GPT-partitioned disks for data volumes (but not bootable volumes) after SP1,[12] which allows using disks greater than 2TB to be used as a single GPT partition for storing data.
- Allows faster encoding of audio or video, higher performance video gaming and faster 3D rendering in software optimized for 64-bit hardware.
- Ships with Internet Information Services (IIS) version 6.0. All other 32-bit editions of Windows XP have IIS v5.1.
- Ships with Windows Media Player (WMP) version 10.[13] Windows XP Professional shipped with WMP 8 (with WMP 9 shipping with Service Pack 2 and later), although WMP 11 is available for Windows XP Service Pack 2 or later.
- Benefits from IPsec features and improvements made in Windows Server 2003.[14]
- Benefits from Shadow Copy features introduced in Windows Server 2003.[further explanation needed][15]
- Remote Desktop Services supports Unicode keyboard input, client-side time-zone redirection, GDI+ rendering primitives for improved performance, FIPS encryption, fallback printer driver, auto-reconnect and new Group Policy settings.[16]
- Files and Settings Transfer Wizard supports migrating settings from both 32-bit and 64-bit Windows XP PCs.[17]
Software compatibility[edit]
Windows XP Professional x64 Edition uses a technology named Windows-on-Windows 64-bit (WoW64), which permits the execution of 32-bit software. It was first used in Windows XP 64-bit Edition (for Itanium architecture). Later, it was adopted for x64 editions of Windows XP and Windows Server 2003.
Since the x86-64 architecture includes hardware-level support for 32-bit instructions, WoW64 simply switches the process between 32- and 64-bit modes. As a result, x86-64 architecture microprocessors suffer no performance loss when executing 32-bit Windows applications. On the Itanium architecture, WoW64 was required to translate 32-bit x86 instructions into their 64-bit Itanium equivalents—which in some cases were implemented in quite different ways—so that the processor could execute them. All 32-bit processes are shown with *32 in the task manager, while 64-bit processes have no extra text present.
Although 32-bit applications can be run transparently, the mixing of the two types of code within the same process is not allowed. A 64-bit program cannot use a 32-bit dynamic-link library (DLL) and similarly a 32-bit program cannot use a 64-bit DLL. This may lead to the need for library developers to provide both 32-bit and 64-bit binary versions of their libraries. Specifically, 32-bit shell extensions for Windows Explorer fail to work with 64-bit Windows Explorer. Windows XP x64 Edition ships with both 32-bit and 64-bit versions of Windows Explorer.[18] The 32-bit version can become the default Windows Shell.[19] Windows XP x64 Edition also includes both 32-bit and 64-bit versions of Internet Explorer 6, so that user can still use browser extensions or ActiveX controls that are not available in 64-bit versions.
Only 64-bit drivers are supported in Windows XP x64 Edition, but 32-bit codecs are supported as long as the media player that uses them is 32-bit.[20]
Installation of programs[edit]
By default, 64-bit (x86-64) Windows programs are installed onto their own folders under folder location 'C:Program Files', while 32-bit (x86-32) Windows programs are installed onto their own folders under folder location 'C:Program Files (x86)'.
Known limitations[edit]
There are some common issues that arise with Windows XP Professional x64 Edition.
- Does not include NTVDM or Windows on Windows, so 16-bit Windows applications or native MS-DOS applications cannot run.[21] Some old 32-bit programs use 16-bit installers which do not run; however, replacements for 16-bit installers such as ACME Setup versions 2.6, 3.0, 3.01, 3.1 and InstallShield 5.x are hardcoded into WoW64 to mitigate this issue.[20]
- Only 64-bit drivers are supported.[20]
- Any 32-bit Windows Explorer shell extensions fail to work with 64-bit Windows Explorer. However, Windows XP x64 Edition also ships with a 32-bit Windows Explorer.[18] It is possible to make it the default Windows Shell.[22]
- Windows Command Prompt does not load in full-screen.[citation needed]
- No native support for Type 1 fonts.[citation needed]
- Does not contain a Web Extender Client component for Web Folders (WebDAV).[23]
- Spell checking is not available in Outlook Express.[24]
- IEEE 1394 (FireWire) audio is not supported.[25]
- Does not support hibernation if PC's RAM is greater than 4GB.[26]
Service packs[edit]
The RTM version of Windows XP Professional x64 Edition is based on Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 1 codebase.[4] Because Windows XP Professional x64 Edition comes from a different codebase than 32-bit Windows XP, its service packs are also developed separately.[27] For the same reason, Service Pack 2 for Windows XP x64 Edition, released on March 13, 2007, is not the same as Service Pack 2 for 32-bit versions of Windows XP.[27] In fact, due to the earlier release date of the 32-bit version, many of the key features introduced by Service Pack 2 for 32-bit (x86) editions of Windows XP were already present in the RTM version of its x64 counterpart.[4] Service Pack 2 is the last released service pack for Windows XP Professional x64 Edition.
References[edit]
- ^ ab'Microsoft Raises the Speed Limit with the Availability of 64-Bit Editions of Windows Server 2003 and Windows XP Professional' (Press release). Microsoft. April 25, 2005. Retrieved September 10, 2015.
- ^ ab'Microsoft Product Lifecycle: Microsoft Windows XP Professional x64 Edition'. Support. Microsoft. Retrieved October 15, 2014.
- ^Broersma, Matthew. 'The importance of being 64-bit ZDNet'. ZDNet. CBS Interactive. Retrieved June 25, 2018.
- ^ abc'A description of the x64-based versions of Windows Server 2003 and of Windows XP Professional x64 Edition (Revision 3.8)'. Support. Microsoft. October 11, 2007. Retrieved January 12, 2011.
The x64-based versions are based on the Windows Server 2003 code tree. Service and support activities for these versions use the Windows Server 2003 tree and do not use the Windows XP client tree.
- ^Oiaga, Marius (December 14, 2007). '64-Bit Windows XP Service Pack 3? Don't think so.. at least for now'. Softpedia. SoftNews. Retrieved October 15, 2014.
- ^'Microsoft Releases Windows XP 64-Bit Edition Version 2003 to Manufacturing'. News Center. Microsoft. March 28, 2003. Retrieved January 12, 2011.
- ^Evers, Joris (January 4, 2005). 'Microsoft nixes Windows XP for Itanium'. Infoworld. IDG. Retrieved January 12, 2011.
- ^'Microsoft Announces Beta Version of Windows XP 64-Bit Edition For 64-Bit Extended Systems'. News Center. Microsoft. September 23, 2003. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^'Processor and memory capabilities of Windows XP Professional x64 Edition and of the x64-based versions of Windows Server 2003'. Support. Microsoft. December 20, 2010. Retrieved September 8, 2013.
- ^'Windows Server 2003 Kernel Scaling Improvements'. Microsoft. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^'The Benefits of x64 Technology'. microsoft.com. Microsoft. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^'Windows XP Disk Support: Windows and GPT FAQ'. Dev Center – Hardware. Microsoft. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^'Changes to Functionality in Microsoft Windows XP Professional x64 Edition'. Microsoft. May 3, 2005. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^'Changes to Functionality in Microsoft Windows XP Professional x64 Edition'. TechNet. Microsoft. IPsec for Windows XP Professional x64 Edition. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^'General FAQs About 64-bit Windows'. MSDN. Microsoft. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^'Remote Desktop for Windows XP Professional x64 Edition'. TechNet. Microsoft. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^'Files and Settings Transfer Wizard for Windows XP Professional x64 Edition'. TechNet. Microsoft. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^ ab'Some Windows Explorer extensions and some Control Panel items are not displayed on computers that are running an x64-based version of Windows'. Support. Microsoft. February 4, 2008. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^Paddock, Brandon (May 22, 2005). 'How to run the 32-bit Explorer shell on Windows x64'. Extended64.com. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^ abc'Release Notes for Windows XP Contained in the Relnotes.htm File'. Support. Microsoft. January 9, 2006. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^'64-bit versions of Windows do not support 16-bit components, 16-bit processes, or 16-bit applications'. Support. Microsoft. September 11, 2011. Retrieved April 19, 2013.
- ^'How to run the 32-bit Explorer shell on Windows x64'. Extended64.com. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^'You cannot connect to a Web folder from a Windows Server 2003 or Windows XP x64 computer'. Support. Microsoft. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^'Changes to Functionality in Microsoft Windows XP Professional x64 Edition'. TechNet. Microsoft. Outlook Express for Windows XP Professional x64 Edition. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^'Changes to Functionality in Microsoft Windows XP Professional x64 Edition'. TechNet. Microsoft. Appendix B: Features Not Supported in Windows XP Professional x64 Edition. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
- ^You cannot put a computer that has more than 4GB of memory into hibernation in Windows XP, in Windows Server 2003, in Windows Vista, or in Windows Server 2008.
- ^ ab'Windows Server 2003 & Windows XP x64 Service Pack 2 Overview'. TechNet. Microsoft. January 25, 2011. Archived from the original on February 2, 2014. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
Further reading[edit]
- 'Benefits of Microsoft Windows x64 Editions'. Microsoft Corporation. February 8, 2006. Retrieved January 12, 2011.
- Da Costa, Andre (April 25, 2006). 'Microsoft Windows XP x64 Edition: Year in Review'. ActiveWin.com. Retrieved January 12, 2011.
- 'List of updates in Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 2 (Revision 15.2)'. Microsoft Support. Microsoft Corporation. February 27, 2009. Retrieved January 12, 2011.