First of all, a metro style "boot menu" with two entries was shown. Unfortunately my approach didn't work well. But at least I was able to launch EasyBCD and extend my boot menu. During Easy BCD install I got a few warnings concerning some. My first idea was, to install EasyBCD 2.1 on the booted Windows 8 To Go and edit the boot menu entries. But I could only use the 64 Bit version of Windows 8 To Go. Then I used the steps described here to create the 2nd Windows 8 To Go instance (64 Bit Developer Preview with Visual Studio 2011) on this partition.Īfter copying the 2nd Windows 8 instance to the USB 2.0 hard disk, the disk was still booteable. So I shrinked the NTFS partition und added a 2nd primary NTFS partition. My idea was, to pack a 2nd 64 Bit Windows 8 To Go on that disk. After installing Windows 8 To Go (32 Bit Developer Preview) on a USB 2.0 hard disk, I have had a lot of free space on that 300 MB drive.
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