He opened Device Manager—all drivers present. He installed the GPU driver from an installer he’d saved on a separate drive. He ran Windows Update, which found 87 updates and the infamous 22H2 feature update. He let them run overnight.
The tool asked for language, edition, architecture. He chose English, Windows 10 Pro, and 64-bit (the architecture of the modern world). Then came the moment of no return: “USB flash drive” vs. “ISO file.” windows 10 install for usb
Then, a new screen: “Getting ready.” A spinning circle of white dots. Then the familiar Windows logo—the four-paned window—appeared, but flat, not glowing. The system rebooted. He opened Device Manager—all drivers present
Leo disabled the microphone. He clicked “Skip” on Microsoft account sign-in, chose “Offline account” (yes, limited experience), created a local user named “Leo,” and set a password. He declined every privacy option—location, ad ID, diagnostic data—like a paranoid ghost. He let them run overnight
Then came the license terms. 10,000 words of legalese. He scrolled to the bottom and clicked “I accept.”
Finally: “Your USB flash drive is ready.”
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