If you have (or expect to have) any hyperthreaded or multi-core systems, 
make sure you create the initial image on one of those machines - the 
multi-processor windows kernel runs fine with no real performance 
penalty on a single processor system - but if you do the initial install 
on a single processor (non-hyperthreaded) system it will use the single 
cpu kernel.  When that image is deployed to a multiprocessor machine, 
you will only be able to see a single processor.  To my knowledge, you 
can't change the kernel without reinstalling windows.

They did this to me when I got my last new system... took forever to 
figure out why on earth almost every diagnostic tool reported that my 
system was hyperthreaded, but windows refused to show two CPU graphs, or 
give me the performance advantage that I expected from a hyperthreaded 
system...

Dan

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Daniel Armbrust
Biomedical Informatics
Mayo Clinic Rochester
daniel.armbrust(at)mayo.edu
http://informatics.mayo.edu/