Installing windows vista upgrade clean
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If you disable this cookie, we will not be able to save your preferences. This means that every time you visit this website you will need to enable or disable cookies again. Select the version of Windows Vista purchased: 4. Search for:. Hi Treefight, You can upgrade and it will be probably OK, but a clean install would improve the speed and compatibility between your applications and the new OS, it's like a spring clean!
You got to find all the VISTA drivers from all your peripherals before thinking to do a clean install. Good luck, it's a long process I'm not so sure that Vista is an upgrade from XP.
But if I had to, I would go with the clean install. Microsoft calls it an upgrade and the instructions with the Vista disc give directions on "upgrading" without doing a clean install. I tried it this morning, but it got stuck on the first screen for over an hour, so I canceled it - none of the sites I found said it should take more than 15 minutes or so between screens though more than an hour total.
Maybe I'll try again. I'm not so worried about drivers as I am authorizations, especially from companies like IK Multimedia, which allot a specific amount BUT do not let you deauthorize a computer, then reauthorize it. Supposedly you can just reauthorize it, but I haven't ever had that work, it always says the plugin has already been authorized. Anyhow, maybe one more shot at upgrade, then just do the clean install and call it a day - a day of installing and authorizing software It's on their website.
Forum Host. I would back up all important data. Emails and such. Then do a clean install. If there is a data transfer wizard to the new OS use it to help in keeping all your important files. But backup first. As said you should do a clean install. You don't want the left behind XP stuff to screw up the new installation.
I hope this helps some people out. Feel free to comment :. Question 12 months ago on Step 1. Didn't work for me the first time I tried, but I repeated the process and second time it worked a treat. This looks like it's going to be a continued problem going forward, as DVD's and CD's are simply old hat. Even tried installing form USB, but that simply refused to work as well, so this was my last option! Thank you for this guide, you helped me alot. Thank you again.
I got it to work by holding CTRL as soon as I saw windows loading, and holding it through windows startup. First, thank you for this guide. I have one problem which is unfortunately in the extremely important step.
For some reason I can't get the repair command prompt console. Any ideas? Last year I upgraded to Win 7 I just experienced a bad infection that has caused me to reinstall Win 7. My question is — can I go all the way back to vista and install the 64 version instead and then upgrade to Win 7 64?
Hey, I'm having some trouble with last step. Any advice? First - thanks - works a treat.
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