Clean install..question about partioning

lls4f

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I'm a student who preordered the Win 7 Home Premium 32 bit edition. I want to do a clean install of win 7 on my laptop which is currently running Vista

My question is: my computer came preloaded with Vista and so I'm not sure what the partition situation is. When I get to the point in the clean install where I need to format the drive, should I just delete what's already there, and then let the install format the drive? I'd like to avoid creating the windows.old file because I have everything I need backed up on an external drive
 

My Computer

OS
Vista
Yes you can do that. but be certain you didn't leave any files behind before you do.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Too many to list.
OS
XP, Seven, 2008R2
CPU
AMD, Intel, VIA
Motherboard
Various
Memory
Corsair, Kingston, etc.
Graphics Card(s)
ATI, NVIDIA
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung
Hard Drives
Maxtor, Western Digital
Keyboard
qwerty
Internet Speed
22 Mb/s @ home, 1 Gb/s @ server
Other Info
All of my systems still run fastest on XP 32-bit for the most part. Win7 is fun to play with, but I still prefer XP for raw speed, security, and functionality.
Since you didn't say it is an Upgrade version, I'll assume you have a full retail Win7, and you want to get rid of Vista with a clean install. Back up your files!

Boot from the installer and at the point where it shows you the partitions available for install, delete each one you don't want, create and format any you do (for Win7, for data, a recovery partition to save your backup image, etc), and then proceed with the install.

Most drivers will be installed from Windows 7 installer, Windows update will have more. You can in advance pull your NIC driver off of the manufacturers web support download page for your model so that you know you have it to get online to find any other drivers needed, Adobe flash/reader, Java runtime, etc.

When it is complete to your satisfaction, use the new Windows 7 Imaging backup to make a backup image of your installation which you can store in a Recovery Partition backed up to an external drive in case of HDD failure. Then you will never have to reinstall again.
 
While using an upgrade disc, can the partion with Vista be formatted. To ask the question in another way, will my activated OS be acknowledged prior to the format?
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell XPS 420
OS
Windows 10, Home Clean Install
CPU
Intel Core2 processsor Q8200(2.33Ghz 1333FSB) Quad Core Tech
Motherboard
Dell
Memory
6 gb
Graphics Card(s)
ATI Radeon 256MB HD3650
Sound Card
Intergrated 7.1 Channel Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell SP2009W 20"
Hard Drives
640 GB Serial ATA Hard drive
Cooling
Fan
Keyboard
Dell USB Keyboard
Mouse
Dell Premium Optical USB
Internet Speed
DSL 2.85
While using an upgrade disc, can the partion with Vista be formatted. To ask the question in another way, will my activated OS be acknowledged prior to the format?


No, when you start the installer from Vista as you must, there is no ability to format. If you want an Upgrade disk installation to formatted metal, I suggest you either 1) install it to a second partition you have previously created and formatted in Disk Management, or (my choice) 2) install to a second HDD: unplug all but Vista drive and target active primary formatted HDD, install from Vista to target HDD, after install unplug cable from Vista HDD and plug to Win7 HDD (or change boot order in BIOS), run startup repair and you have a clean installed Windows 7 in the first part of a HDD.
 
While using an upgrade disc, can the partion with Vista be formatted. To ask the question in another way, will my activated OS be acknowledged prior to the format?

Depends on how you want to use the UPGRADE DISC.
1. If your booted in Vista and insert the disc,{your OS will be acknowledged} you will have the option to "upgrade" and that is all. Win 7 will upgrade over Vista. Vista will no longer be available. Average time to upgrade 2h34m.
2. If you insert the disc, and start the system You can CLEAN INSTALL, {average time to clean install 35m} when ask "DO NOT INSERT THE KEY" the upgrade key will not work.
READ the popup carefully, say YES you want to continue.
You will then have a FULL installed Windows 7 using the DEFAULT 30day Trial KEY.

any time during that 30 day, i recommend do almost instantly. while booted in Win7, insert the DVD and when ask click UPGRADE, when ask insert your UPGRADE KEY.
 
2. If you insert the disc, and start the system You can CLEAN INSTALL, {average time to clean install 35m} when ask "DO NOT INSERT THE KEY" the upgrade key will not work.
READ the popup carefully, say YES you want to continue.
You will then have a FULL installed Windows 7 using the DEFAULT 30day Trial KEY.

any time during that 30 day, i recommend do almost instantly. while booted in Win7, insert the DVD and when ask click UPGRADE, when ask insert your UPGRADE KEY.

You are assuming the old Vista upgrade will work the same with Windows 7. There is indication that it will, and it's certainly possible that Microsoft disabled this loophole.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Too many to list.
OS
XP, Seven, 2008R2
CPU
AMD, Intel, VIA
Motherboard
Various
Memory
Corsair, Kingston, etc.
Graphics Card(s)
ATI, NVIDIA
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung
Hard Drives
Maxtor, Western Digital
Keyboard
qwerty
Internet Speed
22 Mb/s @ home, 1 Gb/s @ server
Other Info
All of my systems still run fastest on XP 32-bit for the most part. Win7 is fun to play with, but I still prefer XP for raw speed, security, and functionality.
While using an upgrade disc, can the partion with Vista be formatted. To ask the question in another way, will my activated OS be acknowledged prior to the format?

Depends on how you want to use the UPGRADE DISC.
1. If your booted in Vista and insert the disc,{your OS will be acknowledged} you will have the option to "upgrade" and that is all. Win 7 will upgrade over Vista. Vista will no longer be available. Average time to upgrade 2h34m.

Not correct. You can either Upgrade or clean install over your Vista, install to a second partition, or install to a second plugged HDD which would allow for a formatted clean install and is my preference. Afterward you can even unplug the VIsta drive, plug its cable into the Win7 installed HDD (or change BIOS boot order), run startup repair, and you have a Win7 single boot clean install on the first part of your HDD.

2. If you insert the disc, and start the system You can CLEAN INSTALL, {average time to clean install 35m} when ask "DO NOT INSERT THE KEY" the upgrade key will not work.
READ the popup carefully, say YES you want to continue.
You will then have a FULL installed Windows 7 using the DEFAULT 30day Trial KEY.

any time during that 30 day, i recommend do almost instantly. while booted in Win7, insert the DVD and when ask click UPGRADE, when ask insert your UPGRADE KEY.

MS specifically foreclosed the Vista upgrade-over-itself trick months ago.

Is this what you are talking about?

Whatever, Technet MVP's have also shot down the rumours that any Upgrade can be done by booting from the Upgrade disk. The qualifying OS activation cannot be read.
 
Greg, yes that's the one. Snuffy seems to think it's still possible. As he has stated many times..mostly in CAPS
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Too many to list.
OS
XP, Seven, 2008R2
CPU
AMD, Intel, VIA
Motherboard
Various
Memory
Corsair, Kingston, etc.
Graphics Card(s)
ATI, NVIDIA
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung
Hard Drives
Maxtor, Western Digital
Keyboard
qwerty
Internet Speed
22 Mb/s @ home, 1 Gb/s @ server
Other Info
All of my systems still run fastest on XP 32-bit for the most part. Win7 is fun to play with, but I still prefer XP for raw speed, security, and functionality.
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