Upgrade From Windows XP to Windows 7 - Comments Page 1
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If I upgrade to Windows 7 from Vista, will all of my Office 2007 Excel documents (with macros) still work if I send them to friends using Vista? EDITOR'S NOTE: I don't see why not. Nothing in Office/Excel will change when you move to W7. |
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Can Windows Vista be updated to Windows 7? EDITOR'S NOTE: Yes, see http://askbobrankin.com/upgrading_to_windows_7.html |
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In 1st paragraph you say: "...you can't directly upgrade an existing Windows XP installation to Windows 7....they are not providing an "in-place" upgrade option for the millions of XP customers who have decided to skip Vista." But then under Option 1 para 3 you say: "If you bought a "full" version of Windows 7, it's OK to format the drive first. But if you got an "upgrade" version of Windows 7, Windows XP must be running when Windows 7 is installed or product activation will fail. So do not format your hard drive before starting to install Windows 7." It appears these 2 paragraphs are contradictory. Am I missing something? Thanks! EDITOR'S NOTE: No contradiction. In the case of the upgrade version, it needs to inspect your hard drive to verify that you have XP, which qualifies you for the cheaper upgrade edition. If found, it prompts you to format the disk and proceed with the Win7 installation. |
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I'm running Win 7 RC on a computer and have a full set of applications installed, and when the release comes out, I'd like to install it in place of the RC. I own a Win XP Pro CD not installed anywhere, but am I right that I'll have to trash the Win 7 RC, install the XP, and then install the Win 7 upgrade? EDITOR'S NOTE: That's not clear to me. It would be NICE if we could just install the final version of Win 7 over top of the RC, but I can't find any confirmation that it will work that way. |
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You mention under Dual Boot Setup that some Windows XP applications will not run under Windows 7. Do you have a list or article on what those applications may be? Thanks! EDITOR'S NOTE: I've addressed that here: http://askbobrankin.com/windows_7_xp_mode.html |
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According to this video on Microsoft technet, all you need is 30 minutes and Microsoft Deployment Toolkit 2010 Beta, In this video, Jeremy Chapman discusses the latest beta of the Microsoft Deployment Toolkit, specificallly the User State Migration Tool, to transfer the user settings and files from a Windowx XP installation to a new install of Windows 7 on the same PC. See the video at this link http://edge.technet.com/Media/User-State-Migration-with-Windows-7/ EDITOR'S NOTE: That's very cool, thanks. I wonder why this is not being publicized better? But it does seem there is a downside -- all the crud and malware will come along for the ride as well. |
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So, it seems I have to buy and install a DVD drive just to install Win 7? That strikes me as unreasonable, as I have no other use for the DVD drive. EDITOR'S NOTE: No, that's not correct. See http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windows-7/get/installation-instructions.aspx -- it says "insert the installation disc into the computer's DVD or CD drive". |
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You mentioned creating a partition and keeping XP and running Windows 7. Is it possible to put a second hard drive in your computer and put Windows 7 on it? EDITOR'S NOTE: Yes, that is essentially the same thing. You can have a dual boot system with two physical drives. |
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I am running XP and have only one hard drive but it has several partitions, one of which is my c:/ where the operating system is. When Windows 7 reformats will it reformat my entire hard drive or just the c:/? EDITOR'S NOTE: Format works on a partition basis, so just the C: will be affected. |
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If you are choosing the dual-boot route, please keep in mind that you should install anti virus/anti spyware software on _both_ partitions. Just because you have anti virus/anti spyware software installed on your Windows XP partition, does not mean that you are protected when surfing the Internet etc. while using software installed in your Windows 7 partition. EDITOR'S NOTE: People still *purchase* anti-virus software? See http://askbobrankin.com/free_antivirus_programs.html |
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