Is there a way to upgrade from Vista Ultimate to 7 Home Premium? I read that you have to upgrade Ultimate to Ultimate, but I don't see the need to spend the extra money on the Windows 7 Ultimate Upgrade.
Yes, put the CD and run setup.exe, select upgrade and wait...20 HOURS!!!....this is the time that said tom's hardware that makes the vista upgrade to 7
Looks like it'll be a fresh install, not an upgrade.
Your right. So I guess you can do a Custom install then from a Windows Vista Ultimate Upgrade. Is there any special instructions in doing this or does it give you the option off the upgrade disc?
Yes you can.You'll be upgrading to a newer os so there should be no problems.However,I recommend going with an OEM version of windows 7,as it will allow you to do a fresh install,which takes next to no time and gives you a fresh start.Simply upgrading will take quite a few hours,which is why I recommend a fresh install.Goodluck.
Yes you can.You'll be upgrading to a newer os so there should be no problems.However,I recommend going with an OEM version of windows 7,as it will allow you to do a fresh install,which takes next to no time and gives you a fresh start.Simply upgrading will take quite a few hours,which is why I recommend a fresh install.Goodluck.
Dahak
So in doing that I'd put the OEM disc in the drive and it would reformat windows and delete my old os right?
So in doing that I'd put the OEM disc in the drive and it would reformat windows and delete my old os right?
Correct - Your original install will end up in a folder called "WINDOWS_OLD". You'll be able to retrieve your data, but will need to reinstall your existing applications.
Alternatively (and what I did) is install a fresh hard drive and Win 7 to that. From there, you can set up a dual boot, or use one of your function keys (usually F6) to select which hard drive to boot from. Once they're both installed, you can retrieve your data at your leisure. You'll still need to reinstall any apps to the new OS.
That is not an upgrade, is it? That's a clean install that stores your old data, correct? I always thought an upgrade kept you programs and preferences in place.
That is not an upgrade, is it? That's a clean install that stores your old data, correct? I always thought an upgrade kept you programs and preferences in place.
Correct - What Microsoft cal an 'in-place upgrade' keeps your files, programs and settings. The issue the OP is having is a versioning one: Since he's not keeping the same version of the two respective OSs, then he has to do a custom install.