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#1420
My Windows 7 64-bit Home computer was infected and would not let me do a System Restore, which I tried as a fix. I was able to launch Windows and do usual stuff like word-process and browse the internet. But I was seeing strange popups from Malwarebytes and the newly installed Comodo security program. I think I got infected when I clicked on a Comodo titled popup soon after installing the security program. Thinking that malfunctioning security programs are a big problem, I did a clean install of my computer and it took me many hours to get back to the way it was with all my data and most of the programs. Would a Repair Install been a quicker solution? Thanks.
Hello ubose,
I'm sorry but no. A repair install would not help with a virus infection.
I would recommend to do a clean install again.
Sorry if this has been asked before, but how long does it take to do the "upgrade"? 2-3 hours?
Hello Texhnologic,
It will greatly vary per system based on it's speed and performance, but yeah I would plan to give yourself at least that long to have time to do the repair install and make any needed setup adjustments afterwards. :)
On the first post:
6. Repair Installed Windows 7 without SP1 using Windows 7 without SP1 DVD/USB
In the Notes box you say:
It is preferred to have SP1 installed and use step 4 or 5 above to do a repair install instead.
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"It is preferred to have SP1 installed . . ." ===> are you referring to the computer os or the install .iso???
My situation:
We have been trying to install our SP1 using windows updates and we have tried everything. This is the only thing left for us to try now.
To be clear: on a machine that has Windows 7 without SP1, we must do the repair using an install disk that DOES NOT have SP1 included in the .iso file. Is that correct?
If that is correct, can I take the Windows 7 install iso, and extract the files to my D: drive using 7-zip and run the set up files from there? You said I could do that with the install disk that HAS sp1 but it was not clear as to whether or not I could do that with the non-SP1 .iso files.
Thanks for the help.
Hello TDPsGM,
In addition, yes, you could extract either ISO (with or without SP1 included) to D: if you like, then run the setup.exe file to start the repair installation. :)
Ok, use the *.iso with SP1 included.
Could that post be edited so others may not have an issue with it?
Why not?
I don't have to waste a dvd and I don't happen to have an extra USB laying around and I have a ton of room on my D: drive.
Seems logical. Am I missing something?
Thanks for the reply by the way.