Bake updates into your reference image. (this will save you the most time per 
machine.)



If every machine gets office, bake that in as well. Plus office updates.



Only put applications that don't change often into the image ( not java, not 
flash player, not adobe reader).



This is called a "hybrid" image, not fully thin, but not thick either.



This way you can update it as often as you want to lower the number of patches 
applying during the imaging process, but you aren't pinned to updating every 
time adobe has a zero day.



If your new to OSD the following books are very useful, heck I reference them 
all the time as well:



http://www.amazon.com/Stealing-Pride-Vol-Customizations-ConfigMgr/dp/9187445034/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1448999110&sr=8-1&keywords=stealing+with+pride



http://www.amazon.com/Deployment-Fundamentals-Vol-Real-World-Infrastructure-ebook/dp/B00OI2H47S/ref=dp_kinw_strp_1



Here are some great reference sites:

http://deploymentbunny.com/



http://deploymentresearch.com/





________________________________
From: [email protected] [[email protected]] on behalf 
of Beardsley, James [[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, December 01, 2015 2:26 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [mssms] Plain image or fully loaded?

Whats the recommended way of building an image? We’re getting ready to start 
using OSD (previously used standalone MDT) and we’re trying to decide if we go 
with how we’ve done things in the past where we load a ton of apps that 
everyone uses on to the image and then capture it. Or, is it recommended to 
simply capture a plain OS-only image and then build apps into the task sequence 
to install afterwards? I know that everyone probably has their own method of 
building an image but I’d appreciate some insight on which one you use and why…

In our testing (granted this may have been due to the hardware of the OSD 
server vs the MDT server), we’ve found that the time it takes to do a plain 
image and then install updates and apps afterwards via TS were taking an hour 
or more for each computer. On the other hand, when we stuffed a bunch of apps 
on to the image and captured it and deployed it via MDT, we were able to image 
a computer in about 25-30 minutes. That’s quite a big discrepancy so needless 
to say, I’m having trouble convincing some within our group who are responsible 
for imaging machines all day to go with the plain image + subsequent task 
sequence method.

Could anyone provide links for recommendations on how to setup the image for 
OSD and if you have any good general OSD-related links, I’d love to see them.

Thanks,

James Beardsley | Firm Technology Group
Dixon Hughes Goodman LLP

[cid:8644FC49-D5C9-45AE-B387-04FAFC0CC7A5]<http://www.dhgllp.com/>

________________________________

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