/capture
1. Build a deployment share 2. Perform a reference computer installation 3. Capture an image of the reference computer 4. Boot the target computers 5. Apply the Windows 7 reference computer image
One method would be using a Windows PE disk to capture an image. Not sure about the other way.
With MDT 2010 and it's Deployment Workbench, building the reference computer and capturing an image of it is one unified process.
To capture a photo of your computer screen, you can use the "Print Screen" button on your keyboard to take a screenshot. Pressing this button will copy an image of your screen to your clipboard. You can then paste this image into an image editing program or document to save or edit it. Alternatively, you can use the Snipping Tool or Snip Sketch feature on Windows computers to capture a specific area of your screen. On Mac computers, you can use the "Command Shift 4" shortcut to capture a selected area or "Command Shift 3" to capture the entire screen.
Any account
It is a command line program that installers can use to prepare Windows 7 computers for imaging, auditing, and deployment. You must use Sysprep.exe to prepare a reference computer by removing all the individualize configuration information before you capture an image of it for distribution on multiple target computers.
To prepare a reference computer before taking an image, you typically use the sysprep command with the parameters /generalize /oobe /shutdown. This command prepares the Windows installation by removing system-specific data and entering the Out-Of-Box Experience (OOBE) state, ensuring that the image can be deployed to different hardware. After executing this command, the computer will shut down, making it ready for imaging.
The Windows logo is copyrighted to Microsoft and it is illegal to save the image onto your computer.
To take a picture of a computer screen, you can use the "Print Screen" button on your keyboard to capture the entire screen or use a screenshot tool to select a specific area. You can then paste the screenshot into an image editing program or use the "Snipping Tool" on Windows to save the image.
To capture all or part of the image displayed on your monitaur
The built-in Windows mechanism to take a screen capture stores the image captured in the clipboard, a temporary place where objects go when you "copy" or "cut" them. To have access to the last screen capture you need to open an image editor program, like Paint, and use the "paste" command (Ctrl-V).
To capture all or part of the image displayed on your monitaur