most GUI installs either use MSI which accepts various flags for settings, or the GUI installer itself secretly accepts flags for settings. a lot of times if you do GUI-Install-Program /? you will get a list of flags it accepts, or there is a website that details many hidden settings. http://www.appdeploy.com/packages/ thats cool that you have a CD that installs everything you need, too bad I can't do that at my work, we have a dozen different kind of computers, a lot of people using different kinds of software, etc. WPKG helps a lot with that though. Kevin Landers wrote: > Back again with yet another question. > > Can wpkg completely take a computer from fresh install to fully loaded? > > For example, in our office we have an automated Windows XP > installation CD that we pop in and when finished it gives us a > pristine install without prompting for anything. > > I am curious as to whether or not wpkg could then be set to install, > run and install each application needed on that machine in turn. I > would imagine there would be a need for reboots. There would be > multiple applications such as office suite, virus scanner, firewalls, etc. > > And with this in mind, how does wpkg handle GUI installers that do not > have a CLI method of install? > > Thanks again, > landersk > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > wpkg-users mailing list archives >> http://lists.wpkg.org/pipermail/wpkg-users/ > _______________________________________________ > wpkg-users mailing list > wpkg-users at lists.wpkg.org > http://lists.wpkg.org/mailman/listinfo/wpkg-users > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.wpkg.org/pipermail/wpkg-users/attachments/20081015/40592878/attachment.html> |