By entering this website, you accept the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy. Our website uses cookies to improve your user experience. Click here to find out more about how we use cookies.
1. Executive Summary WIMBoot (Windows Image File Boot) is a technology introduced by Microsoft with Windows 8.1 Update 1 and Windows 10 (initial releases). It allows a Windows operating system to boot and run directly from a compressed .WIM (Windows Imaging Format) file, rather than extracting all files to traditional disk partitions. This drastically reduces the storage footprint of Windows, making it ideal for low-capacity devices such as 32 GB tablets, thin clients, and embedded systems.
Compact.exe /CompactOS:always However, this requires free space equal to the expanded WIM size. Most OEMs abandoned WIMBoot by 2016. WIMBoot was an innovative storage-optimization technology that allowed Windows to boot from a highly compressed WIM image, significantly reducing flash storage requirements for low-cost devices. While effective for its era (2014–2015), its complexity (dual partitions, pointer files, overlay management) and performance trade-offs led to its replacement by Compact OS. wimboot