Originally posted by: corkyg
You don't run the ISO, you run the CDR or DVD - what ever comes up as a program or playable file. The ISO file is only the coding needed to produce the CD or DVD. If the ISO file is for a bootable slipstreamed version of Windows + SP, then the resultant CD should also be bootable.
The key to that is creating the ISO file from a bootable disk.
When you slipstream SP2 into a Windows XP disk, you have to follow the exact procedures for slipstreaming. And . . . the original Windows XP disk has to be bootable. If it is not, that has to be a separate operation when burning the slipstreamed copy - has to have the BIN files, etc. The contents look like this:
Bootable
It is the bootcat.bin file that makes it bootable.