I downloaded Windows 10 via the "Windows 10 Media Creation Tool" on Windows 7.
Then I downloaded it on Linux.
The files differ in almost every byte, although both were the same language and both were 64-bit.
Which file should I trust?
Windows is more reliable and Linux corrupts your fucking downloads. Use your brain.
You got them both from Microsoft website right?
I'm willing to bet it's an formatting issue
>>59069294
Maybe registered in the image few things to track the install.
>>59069294
Use Linux to generate MD5 hashes of both files and check the hashes in Google?
>>59069294
>>59069333
Linux is just a kernel of the GNU system!
>>59069333
The Windows 7 was a fresh installation that didn't even have SP1 yet. Are you still sure it is more reliable?
>>59069404
>You got them both from Microsoft website right?
Yes.
>I'm willing to bet it's an formatting issue
I wonder why they would give me two differently formatted images.
>>59069417
I checked at several locations. Seems like the files differ in 255 out of 256 bytes.
>>59069427
I found no hashes of the one I downloaded on Windows on Google.
I found SHA1 and MD5 hashes of the one I downloaded on Linux.
Interesting, thanks for the idea.
>>59070033
Can Linux boot off of NTFS?
>>59069294
did u try installing gentoo
>>59070078
Yes, if the kernel is compiled with NTFS read support (which is typically the case).
>>59070078
Why should it?
What could have been the reason?
Does one of the images maybe have more recent updates?