Like many others, I’m trying to find a way to continue using Win 7. I want to continue to use Office 2003 in Win 7. (I’m a writer, have tried later versions of Office, they didn't work for my needs, and am "Biblically committed" to remaining with Office 2003 -- one way or t’other!)
I’m humbly on a low tech level compared to the majority of this forum’s contributors! So please don’t assume that I know much!
I’d like to set up a dual boot, dual hard drive system on a new PC – or on my old PC, if I can’t do this on the new one. My goal is to dual boot Win 7 + Win 10/11 (or Linux).
My old PC (Intel G630 processor) is 12 years old.
According to Intel, my new PC’s 12[SUP]th[/SUP] generation i5-12400 processor won’t run Win 7, but is there a way? Right now, Win 11 Home (22H2) is installed. (The latest Win 11 update, KB5032190, made Office 2003 unusable. I had been able to install Office 2003 and run it for some months OK, with minor loss of functionality, but not any more.)
So I can use my existing hardware (printer, scanner, etc.) from Win 7, I’m not thinking (yet) of installing Win 7 as a virtual OS. (I’ve read that running Win 7 virtually means giving up direct access from Win 7 to my hardware – but again, I don’t know if that’s true.) And, if possible, I'd like to avoid the complexities (for me) of VMWare or VirtualBox (for example), and stick with a straight dual boot system.
To dual boot on my old PC, there are conflicting reports that its Intel G630 processor won’t run Win 10 or 11. I believe I could dual boot Win 7 and Linux on the old PC, but I’d rather not be forced to use that aging machine if I can set up a Win7 + Win 10/11 (or Linux) dual boot on the new one.
Can anyone offer suggestions so I can set up a dual boot system as described on the new PC so I can keep Office 2003 running in Windows 7 and have Windows 10/11 for internet use (or, I’m very willing to leave Win 10/11 behind and replace it with Linux Wine, for example).
Thank you!
I’m humbly on a low tech level compared to the majority of this forum’s contributors! So please don’t assume that I know much!
I’d like to set up a dual boot, dual hard drive system on a new PC – or on my old PC, if I can’t do this on the new one. My goal is to dual boot Win 7 + Win 10/11 (or Linux).
My old PC (Intel G630 processor) is 12 years old.
According to Intel, my new PC’s 12[SUP]th[/SUP] generation i5-12400 processor won’t run Win 7, but is there a way? Right now, Win 11 Home (22H2) is installed. (The latest Win 11 update, KB5032190, made Office 2003 unusable. I had been able to install Office 2003 and run it for some months OK, with minor loss of functionality, but not any more.)
So I can use my existing hardware (printer, scanner, etc.) from Win 7, I’m not thinking (yet) of installing Win 7 as a virtual OS. (I’ve read that running Win 7 virtually means giving up direct access from Win 7 to my hardware – but again, I don’t know if that’s true.) And, if possible, I'd like to avoid the complexities (for me) of VMWare or VirtualBox (for example), and stick with a straight dual boot system.
To dual boot on my old PC, there are conflicting reports that its Intel G630 processor won’t run Win 10 or 11. I believe I could dual boot Win 7 and Linux on the old PC, but I’d rather not be forced to use that aging machine if I can set up a Win7 + Win 10/11 (or Linux) dual boot on the new one.
Can anyone offer suggestions so I can set up a dual boot system as described on the new PC so I can keep Office 2003 running in Windows 7 and have Windows 10/11 for internet use (or, I’m very willing to leave Win 10/11 behind and replace it with Linux Wine, for example).
Thank you!
My Computers
-
At a glance
Windows 11 Home and Windows 7 Pro x64i5-1240012GB- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Dell
- OS
- Windows 11 Home and Windows 7 Pro x64
- CPU
- i5-12400
- Memory
- 12GB
- Antivirus
- Windows Defender
- Browser
- Firefox 120.0
-
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop




