Offline NT Password & Registry Editorseeders: 0
leechers: 10
Offline NT Password & Registry Editor (Size: 33.07 MB)
Description
Tool used to remove a Windows user password in case it is forgotten. I've tested it on my own Windows 10 machine and can confirm it works.
I am NOT the creator of this free software (licensed under the GNU General Public License) NOR do I claim any credit what-so-ever. IF YOU ARE NOT CAREFUL YOU MAY DAMAGE YOUR SYSTEM, BE AWARE OF WHAT EXACTLY YOU ARE DOING. Software downloaded from (and currently still available from): http://pogostick.net/~pnh/ntpasswd/ If you'd like to contact the developer, read the FAQ or need extra instruction go there. There is also a floppy disk version That I haven't included due to how outdated floppy disks are,but it is still available on the developers' site. The instructions are in depth and contain all the information you need "How to make the CD Unzipped, there should be an ISO image file (cd??????.iso). This can be burned to CD using whatever burner program you like, most support writing ISO-images. Often double-clikcing on it in explorer will pop up the program offering to write the image to CD. Once written the CD should only contain some files like "initrd.gz", "vmlinuz" and some others. If it contains the image file "cd??????.iso" you didn't burn the image but instead added the file to a CD. I cannot help with this, please consult you CD-software manual or friends. The CD will boot with most BIOSes, see your manual on how to set it to boot from CD. Some will auto-boot when a CD is in the drive, some others will show a boot-menu when you press ESC or F10/F12 when it probes the disks, some may need to have the boot order adjusted in setup." "How to make an bootable USB drive Copy all the files that is inside the usbXXXXXX.zip or on the CD onto an usb drive, directly on the drive, not inside any directory/folder. It is OK if there are other files on the USB drive from before, they will not be removed. Install bootloader on the USB drive, from command prompt in windows (start the command line with "run as administrator" if possible) X:syslinux.exe -ma X: Replace X: with the drive letter the USB drive shows up as (DO NOT USE C:) If it seems like nothing happened, it is usually done. However, a file named ldlinux.sys may appear on the USB drive, that is normal. It should now in theory be bootable. Please know that getting some computers to boot from USB is worse than from CD, you may have to change settings, or some will not simply work at all." Sharing Widget |