Kenshin17 wrote:I would recommend getting a full version of XP Home, Media Center, or Pro. Then you can simply boot from the XP cd reformate and partition the drive from the startup the CD gives you.
FarmGirl wrote:We needed the DOS floppy because the new hard drive was formatted during the first attempted setup- it lost all preprogramming.
LorentzForce wrote:It has been years (a decade?) since ordinary residential computers could boot off of CD/DVD drives. It has been so since days of around Windows 98. I think 95 did as well, but that's far too far in the past for my simple memory.
Kenshin17 wrote:Odd that me (who has been working on computers since he was 13 or so) did not think to mention the BIOS boot order.
W4C wrote:Why buy the full (non-upgrade) version when you already have the upgrade version? Wouldn't it make more sense to buy an old copy of ME or 98 from somewhere for very cheap? At least, that's what I would do.
Kenshin17 wrote:Two reasons:
1) Doing that with Windows is not as good as installing a clean full version. Windows tries to leave all settings and such the same and it is just not something I recommend. Windows is bad enough as it is no reason to help it.
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