Thanks, it was a corrupt ISO.
That left me with another problem - booting via Easy2Boot does not behave like booting from a real disc. In this case, all the Easy2Boot options I tried either asked me for a Windows 10 key (which I don't have because the Windows 10 licence on this machine came via an upgrade from Windows 7) or left me with an installation that would not activate.
Booting from a real disc (actually an SD card with the ISO installed on it) installed & activated fine without entering a product key.
Is there any way I can make Easy2Boot Windows installs behave exactly like installs from real discs?
Topic: Easy2Boot
Date 31/01/2017
By Paul R
Subject Re: Re: Booting Windows ISOs
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