I've recently learned couple of little tidbits about upgrading
to Windows Vista, and thought I'd share with the world.
There are two ways to install Vista, an upgrade or a clean install.
The upgrade option will preserve your existing applications, files, and
settings; it's intended to be a seamless upgrade with everything working
pretty much the way you had it. A clean install will back up your
previous installation (so you don't have to make your own backup first),
but will not transfer any settings to the new OS. A clean install takes
maybe half an hour; an upgrade can take all day.
With previous versions of Windows, you generally had to boot from the
CD, then begin the installation. With Vista, you can run the installer
from the DVD while your existing installation of Windows is running.
This means that if for some reason your DVD drive isn't bootable (for
example, I have an external FireWire DVD burner that my BIOS doesn't
know how to boot from), you can still install Vista (but be prepared
to connect a bootable DVD drive if anything breaks in the future).
However, be aware that if you bought the upgrade version of Vista
(as opposed to the more expensive full retail version), you cannot
install while booted from the DVD; you must run the installer from
a working system. The full version of Vista will let you do a clean
install (but not an upgrade) while booted from the DVD.
You can do a clean install from within Safe Mode, but it will only
let you do an upgrade install from Normal Mode. If something is
preventing you from booting to Normal Mode, you'll need to fix that
first, or just do the clean install.
Booting from the Vista DVD is a much friendlier experience than
in previous versions of Windows where the setup program looks like
it hasn't changed much in the last two decades. In fact, it
looks very similar to most modern Linux installers - you get a full
GUI, an easy-to-use disk partitioning utility, recovery tools to fix
a broken system or diagnose hardware problems, and convenient access
to a command prompt that doesn't require your Administrator password
like XP's Recovery Console did. I haven't tried it yet, but running
GUI apps from your hard drive via the command prompt on the DVD might
work.
I definitely think Vista is an improvement over XP. They've cleaned
up a lot of stupidity that's been in there for more than a decade. Some
people are freaking out about DRM, but as long as you don't run
Microsoft's media applications, I don't see that being an issue at all.
Sure, plenty of stuff is newly broken - Microsoft has said they're already
planning to release Service Pack 1 around October, and there's a ton of
third-party applications and drivers that are buggy or unavailable - but
people complained about exactly the same thing when Windows 2000 first
came out, and many of those same people now say 2000 is their absolute
favorite OS. Give it time.
However, would I recommend a Vista upgrade to the average user? Nope.
Upgrading to Vista on an existing PC is usually a bad idea. If you're
happy with XP, save your money. If you're not happy with XP, why not
try a Mac?
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