![]() Turns out someone‘s been working on the same thing in the shadows. I thought the idea was great, so I dug a little further. Back then, it was new and shiny, but I guess the buzz around it has kind of died down. Unfortunately, both the Hyper-ConvertImage and Intune.HV.Tools projects have not seen any commits in the last two years. And so, they created their own version, calling it “Hyper-ConvertImage” ( PowerShell Gallery, GitHub). They tried to contribute to the original project but their pull requests weren’t answered. Powers-Hell and friends, who made a pretty damn cool PowerShell module called Intune.HV.Tools, and they really, really needed to use this script in it. The project site on GitHub is hidden somewhere in the MicrosoftDocs repository.Īlong came Mr. Starting out as a script in the PowerShell Gallery, ‘maintained’ by Microsoft, which hasn’t seen an update since 2016. It allows you to create pre-cooked VHDX-files from Windows & Windows Server ISOs, which you can then use again and again when building lab VMs.Īnd if you’re a bit lazy, like me, you’ll like that it saves you the time of clicking through the start of the setup-process. It’s called “Convert-WindowsImage”, and it has a long and tumultuous past. ![]() I just had to get this one out of my system first. No worries, part 2 is still being published, probably somewhere next week. I ran into something a some of you probably remember, from waaaay back in 2020, and I have the uncontrollable urge to revisit it □. This all started while doing research for a sequel to “ Your own Microsoft 365 lab” which, as you can guess, is about setting up VMs for testing in your lab. In this post I will show you how to convert (publicly available) Windows ISO files to bootable VHDX-files you can use over and over again in your lab environment.
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