WTF... Looked into getting this today, Downloaded a programme to see if my lappy was up to it... My God..... would have to get that much stuff done to install it---- i will stick with Vista for now, and think about buying a new lappy and giving this to my XP loving OH. Will work out cheaper in the long run. I need more RAM, more HD space, need to uninstall ATI then re-install it after.. I have 32 GB of unused space on my D drive---- WHY???? Partitions and all that???? Why can't Microsoft make thing easy for a change.
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Where do you think they make the most money?
People like you that want to just buy the software upgrade and do it themselves
or
From companies that bulk purchase licenses and sell millions of computers with the O/S already installed to people that want to update.
If you picked B you're right. Which explains why upgrading is frustrating to you and is causing you to think of buying a new computer. That is exactly what Microsoft and its trade partners want.
People like you that want to just buy the software upgrade and do it themselves
or
From companies that bulk purchase licenses and sell millions of computers with the O/S already installed to people that want to update.
If you picked B you're right. Which explains why upgrading is frustrating to you and is causing you to think of buying a new computer. That is exactly what Microsoft and its trade partners want.
Windows 7, I could pontificate - but I've got a Mac!
Former Member
I installed Win 7 on my second partition. Not sure what all the fuss is about, really. It's just a slightly different looking Windows, especially if you revert, as I always do, to the classic Windows appearance. And some of my applications don't work, such as my anti-virus software. I bought it at the discounted ÂĢ44 rate but I don't think I'd pay any more than that for it. Certainly not the ÂĢ150 now!
If you have a large disk drive and Windows XP already installed then the Home Premium (supposedly an upgrade) can be installed separately. You just download a free partition too (like GPart), create your partitions, and then select the custom install from the CD/DVD which runs on Windows XP to install on the new partition. Then, you get a dual boot menu when the PC starts up. As the file systems are the same, both partitions are visible from either version so copying files is just a normal file copy. The install was very very easy, and quite quick.
If you have a large disk drive and Windows XP already installed then the Home Premium (supposedly an upgrade) can be installed separately. You just download a free partition too (like GPart), create your partitions, and then select the custom install from the CD/DVD which runs on Windows XP to install on the new partition. Then, you get a dual boot menu when the PC starts up. As the file systems are the same, both partitions are visible from either version so copying files is just a normal file copy. The install was very very easy, and quite quick.
Real, having FREE SPACE on your drive does not necessarily mean partitions. Generally speaking you always need some free space for your computer to work.
Former Member
My Win 7 installation is ~17GB.
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