Paradoks: Stay away from Alcohol. It used to be a decent program, but at some point it started installing adware (that cannot be removed without Alcohol itself). People say Daemon Tools is the same these days but I have not verified - personally I didn't have any problems with it, but the last time I've used it was about 2010 I think.
Alright, I won't use Alcohol (there are some people who will be so proud of that).
Paradoks: But if you can actually
run the installer, then I don't think using a different mounting software will help you - you will most likely run into the same problem.
Yeah, that's what I've been thinking, which is why I don't think the mounting software is the problem anymore, but just the installation process itself.
GameRager: Two ideas(crazy ones): Hire some MS empoyees to make you a custom installer/etc. Or setup an advanced ultra-secure firewall(hardware based) with a team of techs monitoring it and a bunch of other cool tech and such and use the net for like under 3 minutes to DL/install the files(with or without an enemy hacker trying to get in to your mainframe while dramatic music plays).
The first idea would be possible if you're rich or know people high up at MS. The second might make for good tv and could make you rich enough to try option 1. Your call, and again I wish you luck. :)
Well, to start with, the reason that my computer is air-gapped in the first place is that I want a 0% possibility of spyware, and frankly, I don't trust Microsoft at all (though I'll use their products, because how can they spy on me from an air-gapped computer?), so the idea of hiring employees from Microsoft is really not one that I would want to pursue. And besides that, I'm sure they wouldn't be allowed to just alter the software for customers, because there's probably a rule against that to which Microsoft makes them agree.
As for the firewall, again, that's not air-gapped, and so it would require me to be connected to the Internet, which is the whole thing that I'm trying to avoid, because it simply isn't secure enough for me.
Also, I'm
not anywhere near rich enough to afford that, anyway, and I want nothing to do with making a TV show, no matter how much money it pays, because I'm a very private person, which is the reason why I'm trying to do this in the first place.
Not bad ideas for brainstorming, though.
Paradoks: However this may be helpful.
This seems to be a problem very similar to yours. If you cannot create an offline installation this way on you online PC, then the you will need to do that in a virtual machine and then transfer it to the offline PC. Alternatively - install VS using online installer on a virtual machine and just run that machine on your offline PC - will be considerably slower but will get the job done.
The link you gave me seems similar to something that I've read before, and actually links to that very same page, about installing using an online computer and then "migrating" the installation to an offline one. However, as I said before, I'm afraid that might not work, because when I try to use the regular online installation on this computer that I'm on right now, I get an error that says it's not compatible with Windows Vista, and I also don't think that it would be compatible with the 32-bit processor on this computer (which would probably give me another error if not for it already giving me the error about Vista and automatically exiting).
But I do wonder about the possibility of running the .msi files directly, which is something that the person on that forum in your link had mentioned, and said that it worked with the first file (the one which is giving me problems) but that it still caused problems later. I guess I'm afraid of installing something half-way and then having it not be able to later properly repair the installation or otherwise uninstall so that I can reinstall.
For example, years ago, I once installed Visual Studio on an external hard drive (not a portable one, just a regular one which is plugged into the computer), and when that drive later broke, I couldn't uninstall it because it couldn't find the files on the drive, but I also couldn't repair or reinstall it because there was still VS junk in registry and stuff on the C drive, so I had no way to do
anything with it. I ended up not using it for a couple years until I eventually got a new computer, and I do NOT want that to happen again!
I suppose if that happened then I could just reformat, but then I'm not sure how I'd register Windows, or for that matter, whether it would even
let me, or if it would tell me that the copy with that serial number or whatever is already registered!
GameRager: Windows "black" versions say hi.
What's that?
ZyloxDragon: For Windows, it doesn't need to be activated until a number of days have passed. With older versions of Windows, I think it was 30 days, and then you can run a command line to "rearm" the trial period to allow it to be used for another additional 30 days. You could do this either 2 or 3 times. Afterwards, you would have to either activate it, or reinstall Windows to get another additional set of trial(s). Not sure if the same method applies with Windows 7 and above.
You could kind of get around it with changing the date/time in the BIOS, but you would have to reset it on every boot, and make sure you shut the system down when you were done using it.
Yeah, but in this case, there
must be some file somewhere that says when it was installed or when it expires, and it just checks that timestamp to see if it's still valid. So I could change it to be WAAAAAY in the future, like a million years or something (I think we use larger data types for dates these days, so I don't think it would cause another Y2K glitch).