Of course, the files available today may or may not be the same files that were available in 2013. Read through the posts on this thread, especially the post from JW Stuart on February 5, 2013: Microsoft seems to have more commonly used SHA1 checksums. MD5 checksums for Windows ISO files are not readily available. Moreover, different versions of Windows will have different checksums. You need to get the checksum - whether MD5, SHA1, or other - from the source from which you obtained the ISO in the first place or at least get the checksum for the file with the same Microsoft Part Number. You need to get the checksum - whether MD5, SHA1, or other - from the source from which you obtained the ISO in the first place or at least get the checksum for the file with the same Microsoft Part Number. You need to compare it to the value that Microsoft got from the original file - which is what I suppose your actual question was. Just running that utility on a DVD or ISO file won't do much for you.
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