The desktop background is back to default. The program is gone. The settings are reset.
It's like a groundhog day for operating systems. And for anyone who values ephemeral computing—journalists, travelers, security researchers, or just the privacy-conscious—that's not a bug. That's the entire point. Microsoft's licensing technically doesn't allow bootable Windows from removable media unless it's a licensed "Windows To Go" (Enterprise only). But building a RAM-booted drive for your own machines? That's a grey area where tinkerers thrive. bootable windows 10
This isn't magic. It's a RAM-booted Windows 10 —and it's the closest thing to a "burner OS" you can build legally. A standard Windows boot loads the OS from your hard drive or SSD, reads and writes files constantly, and leaves logs everywhere. A typical "Windows To Go" drive (Microsoft's deprecated official portable workspace) still writes to the USB stick—leaving forensic evidence of what you installed or opened. The desktop background is back to default
That's not just a tool. That's a statement. It's like a groundhog day for operating systems