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I've looked through all the related questions and done some searches and couldn't find a duplicate, so I'm pretty sure this isn't one.

I have a machine that has 512MB of RAM, and can boot from a CD drive. I want to run Windows 8 on it. This is not my main computer, and no it cannot have 1GB of RAM; please don't tell me not to try to run Windows 8 on it or that it will run badly.

On my main computer, a Mac, I installed the Windows 8 Consumer Preview .iso into a VirtualBox virtual machine, while the virtual machine had 1024MB of RAM, and then brought it down to 512MB after the install and it works to my satisfaction. I now have a configured, installed copy of Windows 8 on my .vdi file. I want to write this to the hard drive of my older laptop with the 512MB of RAM.

I can't find instructions to write the .vdi file to a real media (say, a flash drive). I know that a .vdi file also holds a partition table, etc…, but don't mind over-writing the flash drive. I would expect there would be a way to format the .vdi image (say, with VBoxManage) into a .img file which can be written to the disk with DD (possibly passing it through a .vmdk file or QEMU).

Once I have the image on the flash drive, I can boot the laptop from a linux live CD and DD the contents of the flash drive onto the hard disk, and then resize the hard disk partition, so if you can get me the .img image or flash drive formatted, I think that's good. I also accept other ways to get it onto the laptop hard drive (although I can't remove the hard drive, so installing Windows 8 on another laptop using that drive is out) or ways to do a fresh install on the laptop itself bypassing the system requirement check.

EDIT: The laptop doesn't have Windows installed, by the way.

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Not sure about the Virtualbox method but how about creating a backup image from within Windows 8 on the virtual machine and the associated System Repair Disk and then using these to install on the low spec PC. Not tried this myself but it should be pretty quick to try.

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  • I don't think I was clear enough, the old laptop can only boot from the CD drive - no OS installed because I overwrote my whole disk with an incorrectly created image. Commented Mar 4, 2012 at 20:36
  • That's ok - the System Repair Disk will allow you to boot the laptop into a recovery mode then you should be able change disks and load the backup image.
    – BJ292
    Commented Mar 4, 2012 at 22:59
  • The concept of 'recovery disk' depends upon the concept of 'bootable hard disk', no? Also, the duplicate's method worked fine. Commented Mar 5, 2012 at 23:21
  • Oh, I see what you mean - use the System Repair CD. I don't have a system repair disk. I don't use Windows. I do, however, have a Xubuntu install CD (that I usually use) and a GParted CD which I use for this kind of thing - my solution was to take the raw file and DD it onto the hard drive from GParted Commented Mar 6, 2012 at 12:56

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