Help with dual boot
#1
Posted 06 June 2008 - 07:21 PM
Thanks in advance for any help
#2
Posted 09 June 2008 - 11:52 PM
You could try to copy the program from the Program Files (the whole folder) and paste it into the Vista machine and try it. Some programs will work, some will break. (programs that put everything needed to start the program into the program files folder will most likely work, others that put files in the system32 or WINDOWS folder will not work properly)
#3
Posted 13 June 2008 - 09:42 AM
As for windows xp you must NOT RUN but do a reinstall : boot from win xp cd - in first screen press ENTER for setup - in second
screen press R for repair - now continue like clean install...
BEFORE all that you sould read articles about installing XP after VISTA:
1)http://www.howtogeek...vista-computer/
2)http://apcmag.com/ho...uide.htm?page=1
3)http://www.pronetwor...about88231.html
.
.
.
In these articles you replace install with reinstall
I hope its usefull.
#4
Posted 14 June 2008 - 09:11 AM
#5
Posted 21 June 2008 - 07:56 AM
Hi kwheeler7, hello everybody !
I can hardly add more to what's been replied here. I can only tell about my own experience with the dual-booting process.
I have both XP and Vista installed on different partitions.
When I once started my XP > Control Panel > System > and set the time to 0 to display boot options, I found that I could boot my XP only, pressing F8 did not display an entry to choose to boot Vista, and reverting to the default time to display boot options did not allow me to boot Vista. Thus, I could not switch to booting Vista. And there's no microsoft utility to do that.
I found EasyBCD by NeoSmart Technologies
and
VistaBootPRO by ProNetworks
I tried all those versions and found EasyBCD 1.1 to be the best utility for dual boot, with all features working, in XP and Vista.
So, I successfully use EasyBCD 1.1 for the dual boot purpose.
Run EasyBCD
Click "Configure BCD" tab
In the "Default OS", choose your OS to boot next time
Click "Save settings"
EasyBCD 1.1 is the best version.
On your post, kwheeler7, what do you actually want to do :
Quote
Thanks in advance for any help
If what you want to do is to install your old XP of the old xp machine, from the Acronis image, then you can't do it, for your old xp machine's hardware does differ from your new machine's.
Just freshly install XP to a partition, I prefer XP on Disk C, and Vist on any other, 'cause unlike XP, Vista sees any partition on which installed as C.
If you have documents within the image, then find a way to read from the image, or temporarily extract the image to a different partition, copy the documments you need, and delete what you don't need.
Regards,
#6
Posted 21 June 2008 - 02:00 PM
MSFVS, on Jun 21 2008, 04:56 PM, said:
from the Acronis image, then you can't do it,
for your old xp machine's hardware does differ from your new machine's.
but my friend of course you can:
1) put image on a disk
2) put disk in a pc
3) DO NOT start pc
4) boot from winXP CD
5) first screen press ENTER NOT repair
6) second screen press R NOT esc
7) continue installing
8) all drivers,programs,everything sould be as they where.
That's install-repair or reinstall
#7
Posted 22 June 2008 - 05:21 PM
#8
Posted 24 June 2008 - 06:13 PM

TechFind, on Jun 21 2008, 02:00 PM, said:
MSFVS, on Jun 21 2008, 04:56 PM, said:
from the Acronis image, then you can't do it,
for your old xp machine's hardware does differ from your new machine's.
but my friend of course you can:
1) put image on a disk
2) put disk in a pc
3) DO NOT start pc
4) boot from winXP CD
5) first screen press ENTER NOT repair
6) second screen press R NOT esc
7) continue installing
8) all drivers,programs,everything sould be as they where.
That's install-repair or reinstall

Am I loosing your point, friend, in that it is possible to make image of XP on one machine and then install XP from the image onto another with completely different hardware ?
This is to ask:
- if for example one has a desktop with Pentium 4 + NVIDIA + Realtek + XP Pro on partition C, and a notebook with Core 2 Duo + ATI + Creative + Vista on partition C, can he then make image of XP and then use the image to install XP to the notebook system ? Will XP installed this way function ?
Anyway, kwheeler7's way is better.
#9
Posted 26 June 2008 - 01:57 AM
MSFVS, on Jun 25 2008, 03:13 AM, said:

TechFind, on Jun 21 2008, 02:00 PM, said:
MSFVS, on Jun 21 2008, 04:56 PM, said:
from the Acronis image, then you can't do it,
for your old xp machine's hardware does differ from your new machine's.
but my friend of course you can:
1) put image on a disk
2) put disk in a pc
3) DO NOT start pc
4) boot from winXP CD
5) first screen press ENTER NOT repair
6) second screen press R NOT esc
7) continue installing
8) all drivers,programs,everything sould be as they where.
That's install-repair or reinstall

Am I loosing your point, friend, in that it is possible to make image of XP on one machine and then install XP from the image onto another with completely different hardware ?
This is to ask:
- if for example one has a desktop with Pentium 4 + NVIDIA + Realtek + XP Pro on partition C, and a notebook with Core 2 Duo + ATI + Creative + Vista on partition C, can he then make image of XP and then use the image to install XP to the notebook system ? Will XP installed this way function ?
Anyway, kwheeler7's way is better.
Begin with
check this out :http://www.acronis.com/enterprise/products/ATIES/universal-restore.html
and google "reinstall windows xp"



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