Windows Vista Home Basic

techman9

New member
Over thanksgiving, i was called in to help my aunt's Thinkpad connect to the printer. She mentioned that she'd like windows 7 so i helped her get Windows Ultimate Steal using her .edu email address. It downloaded well, and we opened up the setup file. I was just leaving, so i told her to click upgrade when the prompt came. i received a call saying a dialog box popped up saying it could not upgrade from Vista Home basic, which she was apparantly running. Does anyone know of a solution or workaround to let her upgrade to Windows 7? :geek:
 

My Computer

OS
windows 7/vista
Which version of Win7 did she buy?

According to the upgrade matrix:

http://i.zdnet.com/blogs/windows_7_upgrade_chart.png

Vista Home Basic can be upgraded-in-place to Win7 Home Premium or Ultimate.

That only applies within the same addressing type: 32 bit can only be upgraded-in-place to 32 bit, 64 to 64.

An upgrade license can be used in other ways, but only with a custom (clean) install.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
homegrown
OS
Windows 7 Pro X64 SP1
CPU
Intel Core I7-3930k
Motherboard
Asus P9X79 Pro
Memory
16 GB Gskill DDR3-2133
Graphics Card(s)
eVGA GTX680
Sound Card
Creative X-Fi Titanium
Monitor(s) Displays
As PA246Q
Screen Resolution
1920 X 1200
Hard Drives
Corsair Force GT, 120 GB
WDC 1.5TB Caviar Black
PSU
PCP&C Silencer 750 Crossfire
Case
Silverstone FT02
Cooling
Noctua NH-D14
Keyboard
cheap Logitech USB
Mouse
Microsoft Intellimouse Explorer (old optical) USB
Internet Speed
6Mb cable
Other Info
Pioneer BDR-205
Samsung SH-203B
Monsoon 5.1 speakers
oh. Sorry. Ultimate Steal comes with Professional, and i don't really want to do a clean install. That's why a workaround or solution would be needed.
 

My Computer

OS
windows 7/vista
techman, I am afraid it might not be possible, at least not in any ortodox way.
If you do a clean install you shoudl end up with a windows.old folder, which contains all your files previously in Vista, with the respective locaitons. You then have to move them to the final place, but also reinstall the applications.
I beleive you might be able to use Windows Easy Transfer tool, although it is meant for migrating XP to Win7, but I see no reason for not working with Vista.
In any case, please backup your personal files before attempting anything. There are chances yuo have problems in the process and have to reformat the drive, when you will regret if you didn't backup first.

This MS tutorial should also help
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Wally, Innc.
OS
Windows 7 x64 finally!
CPU
AMD Athlon II X2 240
Motherboard
Biostar TA790GX XE
Memory
OCZ Platinum 4GB DDR2 1066 (will not work past 800MHz)
Graphics Card(s)
MSI R4670-MD1G Radeon HD 4670 1GB 128-bit GDDR3
Sound Card
ATI High Definition Audio Device Realtek ALC888
Monitor(s) Displays
HP w19e
Screen Resolution
1440x900
Hard Drives
Western Digital Caviar Green WD5000AADS 500GB SATA
Western Digital Caviar Blue WD5000AAKS 500GB SATA
PSU
Athena Power Micro ATX 400W
Case
HEC 6T 6T10BB Black MicroATX Mini Tower
Cooling
stock
Keyboard
wired, many keys
Mouse
HP wireless, 2 buttons, 1 wheel
Internet Speed
DSL 2Mb (recently getting 1.65M!)
Since you asked for workarounds and have a legal higher-version upgrade license, maybe something in here might be adaptable to Vista>Win7 upgrade:

UNAWAVE - Downgrade Ultimate to Home Premium or Professional

It works like a charm between Win7 versions.

What you want to do if trying workarounds is use Backup imaging program like free Macrium Reflect CD to back up a system image if you cannot afford to lose it, so you can easily reimage and start over if necessary. Back up files anyway.

At worst you are then left with a clean install. Boot from the DVD and used Advanced tools to format.
 
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