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| | #1 (permalink) |
| | Installation of Windows XP2 on a Windows Vista system I got my new computer with Windows Vista already installed. My old computer with Windows XP2 crashed. Many of my sotware programs, especially games, will not work on Windows Vista, so I thought I could install Windows XP2 as a co-existing operating system without messing up the installed program Windows Vista. Is this possible? If so, what is the safest way to do this? I have anextra hard drive installed How do I place XP2 into the second hard drive? |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| | Re: Installation of Windows XP2 on a Windows Vista system Haroldo1 wrote: > I got my new computer with Windows Vista already installed. My old computer > with Windows XP2 crashed. Many of my sotware programs, especially games, will > not work on Windows Vista, so I thought I could install Windows XP2 as a > co-existing operating system without messing up the installed program Windows > Vista. Is this possible? If so, what is the safest way to do this? I have > anextra hard drive installed How do I place XP2 into the second hard drive? Since the older OS should be installed first, you'll have trouble creating a dual-boot scenario without using 3rd-party products. However, dual-booting is no longer necessary in such situations. Why not download a Virtual Machine application, such as Microsoft's VirtualPC 2007 (http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/search.asp?) or Innotek's VirtualBox (http://www.virtualbox.org/) and run WinXP and your legacy applications within a virtual computer. Both are free and work with Vista. (Microsoft does not support the use of VirtualPC 2007 on Vista Home editions, but several people have reported that it works just fine.) -- Bruce Chambers Help us help you: http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. -Benjamin Franklin Many people would rather die than think; in fact, most do. -Bertrand Russell |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| | Re: Installation of Windows XP2 on a Windows Vista system Do you have a retail version of XP? If not the OEM version can't be installed. Bruce's suggestion would be best, but if it doesn't work for you, make sure you set the new drive as first in boot priority, install XP, then reset the Vista drive back as first in boot priority, boot into Vista, download and install EasyBCD or VistaBootPro and set up a legacy os entry for your XP system. Remember, if you don't use a third party boot manager to hide your Vista partition, when you boot into XP you will loose your Vista Restore Points and Shadow copies. "Haroldo1" <Haroldo1@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:0C00A17F-A353-4C4F-B3CA-DF0C0BBF0630@microsoft.com... >I got my new computer with Windows Vista already installed. My old computer > with Windows XP2 crashed. Many of my sotware programs, especially games, > will > not work on Windows Vista, so I thought I could install Windows XP2 as a > co-existing operating system without messing up the installed program > Windows > Vista. Is this possible? If so, what is the safest way to do this? I have > anextra hard drive installed How do I place XP2 into the second hard > drive? |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| | Re: Installation of Windows XP2 on a Windows Vista system "Bruce Chambers" wrote: > Haroldo1 wrote: > > I got my new computer with Windows Vista already installed. My old computer > > with Windows XP2 crashed. Many of my sotware programs, especially games, will > > not work on Windows Vista, so I thought I could install Windows XP2 as a > > co-existing operating system without messing up the installed program Windows > > Vista. Is this possible? If so, what is the safest way to do this? I have > > anextra hard drive installed How do I place XP2 into the second hard drive? > > > Since the older OS should be installed first, you'll have trouble > creating a dual-boot scenario without using 3rd-party products. > > However, dual-booting is no longer necessary in such situations. > > Why not download a Virtual Machine application, such as Microsoft's > VirtualPC 2007 (http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/search.asp?) or > Innotek's VirtualBox (http://www.virtualbox.org/) and run WinXP and your > legacy applications within a virtual computer. Both are free and work > with Vista. (Microsoft does not support the use of VirtualPC 2007 on > Vista Home editions, but several people have reported that it works just > fine.) > > > -- > > Bruce Chambers > > Help us help you: > http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm > http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html > > They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary > safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. -Benjamin Franklin > > Many people would rather die than think; in fact, most do. -Bertrand Russell > |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| | Re: Installation of Windows XP2 on a Windows Vista system "Haroldo1" wrote: >I got my new computer with Windows Vista already installed. > My old computer with Windows XP2 crashed. Many of my > sotware programs, especially games, will not work on > Windows Vista, so I thought I could install Windows XP2 as > a co-existing operating system without messing up the installed > program Windows Vista. Is this possible? If so, what is the > safest way to do this? I have anextra hard drive installed > How do I place XP2 into the second hard drive? Since you have 2 hard drives, just disconnect the Vista HD and install XP on the 2nd HD. Then, with both HDs connected, choose one or the other via the Hard Drive Boot Order in the BIOS when you start up (NOT the Device Boot Order). The HD Boot Order setting, which selects which HD's MBR will get control at startup, will persist through subsequent startups until you change it. Each OS, since it will have been installed in isolation, will call its own partition "C:" when it is running, and it will refer to other partitions by names that it selects. But if each OS does not have shortcuts which refer to other partitions, that won't be a problem, and files may be drag-n-dropped between all partitions regardless of hard drive. If you want a software (as opposed to firmware) solution, you will have to use a 3rd-party utility to enable dual-booting because the later OS (i.e. Vista) has been installed before the earlier OS (i.e. XP) will be installed. Free utilities that will enable the dual- boot scenario are: EasyBCD ( http://neosmart.net/dl.php?id=1 ) and VistaBoot Pro ( http://www.vistabootpro.org/ ). One or both of them *might* require a separate partition in which to run. *TimDaniels* |
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