The scenario was always the same. A client’s PC was dead. Windows XP would load to a blue screen, or worse, it wouldn't boot at all. The registry was corrupted, the Master Boot Record was fried, or the user forgot their password and had critical Excel files on the desktop.
It didn't look like much. It looked like a utilitarian, grey-folder icon burned onto a cheap disc. But to you, it was the Excalibur of the IT world. hiren boot iso
If you were lucky, you selected the "Mini Windows XP" option. It was a marvel of engineering—a stripped-down version of Windows that ran entirely from the RAM, ignoring the broken hard drive. The scenario was always the same