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I have a question about my Super User post: I can't map a network share from PXE - WinPE

  

Hi, I have written a question yesterday and I'd like, if someone can help, to know whether my question is well-written/following the site standards, or not. I've been reading some FAQs in the superuser help center, about questions (Specially, How do I ask a good question?). I think my question is Ok, but I would like if someone with more experience than me, could give me a well documented point of view. If it has some kind of error, or even if it's entirely erroneous, I'm willing to work on it, and rewrite, if necessary. Because I'd like to setup my iPXE server and also I'm enjoying the technical experience. Also, I have read somewhere, don't remember where, that there is a normalized questions scheme, in technical IT forums, like:

I have a home installation like this and this and technical information.

I want to achieve this and all the information about what you want to achieve.

I have tried this and this ...

So, how could I continue? ...

That is what I said about a scheme for questions. I have not read something like that in the FAQ about questions in superuser. So Is there some scheme like this, or it is more free, meaning I can structure it as I naturally would write it? obviously I am clear about the How do I ask a good question? points.

For example, in my post I wrote the technical stuff at the end, but I don't know If I should have written it at the beggining, or I'm free to write it anywhere, as I did.

 

I have a question about my Super User post: I can't map a network share from PXE - WinPE

 

Hi, I have written a question yesterday and I'd like, if someone can help, to know whether my question is well-written/following the site standards, or not. I've been reading some FAQs in the superuser help center, about questions (Specially, How do I ask a good question?). I think my question is Ok, but I would like if someone with more experience than me, could give me a well documented point of view. If it has some kind of error, or even if it's entirely erroneous, I'm willing to work on it, and rewrite, if necessary. Because I'd like to setup my iPXE server and also I'm enjoying the technical experience. Also, I have read somewhere, don't remember where, that there is a normalized questions scheme, in technical IT forums, like:

I have a home installation like this and this and technical information.

I want to achieve this and all the information about what you want to achieve.

I have tried this and this ...

So, how could I continue? ...

That is what I said about a scheme for questions. I have not read something like that in the FAQ about questions in superuser. So Is there some scheme like this, or it is more free, meaning I can structure it as I naturally would write it? obviously I am clear about the How do I ask a good question? points.

For example, in my post I wrote the technical stuff at the end, but I don't know If I should have written it at the beggining, or I'm free to write it anywhere, as I did.

I have a question about my Super User post: I can't map a network share from PXE - WinPE

 

I have written a question yesterday and I'd like, if someone can help, to know whether my question is well-written/following the site standards, or not. I've been reading some FAQs in the superuser help center, about questions (Specially, How do I ask a good question?). I think my question is Ok, but I would like if someone with more experience than me, could give me a well documented point of view. If it has some kind of error, or even if it's entirely erroneous, I'm willing to work on it, and rewrite, if necessary. Because I'd like to setup my iPXE server and also I'm enjoying the technical experience. Also, I have read somewhere, don't remember where, that there is a normalized questions scheme, in technical IT forums, like:

I have a home installation like this and this and technical information.

I want to achieve this and all the information about what you want to achieve.

I have tried this and this ...

So, how could I continue? ...

That is what I said about a scheme for questions. I have not read something like that in the FAQ about questions in superuser. So Is there some scheme like this, or it is more free, meaning I can structure it as I naturally would write it? obviously I am clear about the How do I ask a good question? points.

For example, in my post I wrote the technical stuff at the end, but I don't know If I should have written it at the beggining, or I'm free to write it anywhere, as I did.

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I'd like to know whether my post is well written or not

I have a question about my Super User post: I can't map a network share from PXE - WinPE

Hi, I have written a question yesterday and I'd like, if someone can help, to know whether my question is well-written/following the site standards, or not. I've been reading some FAQs in the superuser help center, about questions (Specially, How do I ask a good question?). I think my question is Ok, but I would like if someone with more experience than me, could give me a well documented point of view. If it has some kind of error, or even if it's entirely erroneous, I'm willing to work on it, and rewrite, if necessary. Because I'd like to setup my iPXE server and also I'm enjoying the technical experience. Also, I have read somewhere, don't remember where, that there is a normalized questions scheme, in technical IT forums, like:

I have a home installation like this and this and technical information.

I want to achieve this and all the information about what you want to achieve.

I have tried this and this ...

So, how could I continue? ...

That is what I said about a scheme for questions. I have not read something like that in the FAQ about questions in superuser. So Is there some scheme like this, or it is more free, meaning I can structure it as I naturally would write it? obviously I am clear about the How do I ask a good question? points.

For example, in my post I wrote the technical stuff at the end, but I don't know If I should have written it at the beggining, or I'm free to write it anywhere, as I did.