New
#41
Clean install of windows7 is always best because you wont have any left over junk or drivers installed on top of drivers which can create conflicts.
Clean install of windows7 is always best because you wont have any left over junk or drivers installed on top of drivers which can create conflicts.
Hi,
the table shown lists an in-place installation of Win7 Ultimate over Vista 7 Ultimate is permissible - I tried just that some days ago and was advised that I needed to do a clean installation (by the setup program on the DVD started from within Vista...
Would save me a lot of hassles if I COULD get this upgrade to work (everything legit on the PC/DVD). Pls advise.
Carioca, I hope you don't mind me asking but do you already know how to get Windows Media Player, Windows Media Center and other missing media components to that N edition of Windows of yours?
If not, read this: No Media Center.
Kari
Thanks Kari!
I chose this edition specifically as it runs a a computer dedicated to online financial business - there are no 'distracting' and/or potentially 'disruptive' programs on that machine, not even e-mail!
But thank you for your kind attention to detail, and the link you provided...
Rgds,
LMH (ex-European now living in Oz)
great great !!!
Okay, I just got done reading the thread and I'm still not 100% on what path to take.
Here is my situation.
I have a HDD (lets call it HDD A) that currently has Windows XP x64 Edition on it. I recently acquired a new larger HDD (lets call it HDD B) that I would like to install the Windows 7 Upgrade on. The upgrade requires a full licence from a previous windows product that I do qualify for. However, the previous version has to be on the HDD before the upgrade will allow registration & activation. Here are the ideas that seem to be possible.
1. Install Windows 7 on HDD B (don't register or activate). Reinstall over Windows 7 and then Activate. (I've been told this method no longer works)
2. Attach both HDD A & HDD B to the motherboard. Start the install on HDD A but have the install process partition and install the OS to HDD B. (I'm not sure if this would work)
3. Find my recovery disk and reinstall Windows XP on HDD B. After that completes install Windows 7 upgrade over freshly installed Windows XP on to HDD B. (I'm pretty sure this would work though I'm not sure if I could reactivate my windows on a new HDD, but then I'm not sure if activation is required either although I assume it is.)
4. Copy HDD A to HDD B. Install Windows 7 Upgrade to HDD B. (This is my last resort method and I really do not want to do this.)
Also I'm buying the upgrade from Microsoft as part of a student promotion for $29.99. I was wondering what form the download will be in and do I have to burn it to a disc or can I put it on a removable storage device.