Ah, I initially tried that but I did not have success. Seems like it should 
work though so I will try again. 

Thanks! 







Dan Franciscus 

Systems Administrator 

Information Technology Group 

Institute for Advanced Study 

609-734-8138 




From: "Bain.John" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Monday, January 11, 2016 12:50:28 PM 
Subject: [MDT-OSD] RE: MDT Litetouch offline media 



You want a Lite touch bootable ISO, you’ve probably already built one and dont 
realize it. 



https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn781086.aspx 




Step 4-1: Create the LTI Bootable Media 

You need to provide a method for starting the computer with the customized 
version of Windows PE you created when you updated the deployment share. The 
Deployment Workbench creates the LiteTouchPE_x64.iso and LiteTouchPE_x64.wim 
files (for 64-bit target computers) or LiteTouchPE_x86.iso and 
LiteTouchPE_x86.wim files (for 32-bit target computers) in the deployment_share 
\Boot folder (where deployment_share is the network shared folder used as the 
deployment share). Create the appropriate LTI bootable media from one of these 
images. 

To create the LTI bootable media 

    1. In Windows Explorer, go to C:\DeploymentShare$\Boot. 
    2. Based on the type of computer used for the reference computer 
(WDG-REF-01), perform one of the following tasks: 


        * If the reference computer is a physical computer, create a physical 
CD or DVD of the LiteTouchPE_x64.iso or LiteTouchPE_x86.iso file. 
        * If the reference computer is a VM, start the VM directly from the 
LiteTouchPE_x64.iso or LiteTouchPE_x86.iso file or from a CD or DVD of the 
International Standard Organization (ISO) files. 











From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Daniel Franciscus 
Sent: January 11, 2016 12:41 PM 
To: [email protected] 
Subject: [MDT-OSD] MDT Litetouch offline media 





Hi all, 





Disclaimer: I am a bit of an MDT newbie. 





I would like to make a bootable USB of litetouch that would be used to connect 
to our MDT share and deploy an OS just like it does through PXE. When using the 
Advanced Configuration > Media method in MDT, it looks like it takes my 
existing MDT share and puts it all on an ISO which makes the ISO quite large 
since I have custom OS's and applications. What I would like to do is have a 
bootable USB that is essentially the same thing as my Lite Touch Windows PE 
(x64) used through PXE and doesnt require a copy of my existing MDT share. 





Any suggestions? 












Dan Franciscus 

Systems Administrator 

Information Technology Group 

Institute for Advanced Study 

609-734-8138 




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