1 week later with win7
Thursday, November 5, 2009 by AzDude | Discussion: Personal Computing
The Good and the Bad......
The Bad: NONE
The Good: It's ALL GOOD !
I remember a week after Vista came out I was still searching for hardware drivers and program updates ..
Not so with 7 ... 1 week later i got a lean mean clean fighting machine all hardware drivers(except) 1 printer driver
loaded up from the get-go! .... and thus far all the programs i use work to ...
Also Stardock/Wincustomize was ready this time for 7 ... and except for bootskins all that i use from them
is up and running - big ups to Stardock Team ....
It's looks like finally WINDOWS got it right
faster start up and shutdown - no pop ups - NO problems - just computing without windows getting in the way ...
as I said ............ " It's All Good So Far ! " ...................... azdude ...
Reply #2 Thursday, November 5, 2009 9:28 AM
Unless it's an ancient/uncommon printer..
Oh I have the driver backed up .. was installed 5 mins later ( lexmark) running 2 printers Hp the other
had all my stuff backed up - a couple of days loading it all back and i was good to go !
Reply #3 Thursday, November 5, 2009 9:44 AM
Glad to hear. I've been using Vista for 1 week now and my free 7 upgrade is in the mail (should be here by Monday) and I can't wait!!
Reply #4 Thursday, November 5, 2009 9:48 AM
Did my upgrade thing. Got the message "Can't upgrade"...so it did a full, clean install! I got it on the cheapo!
Next? A wireless printer.
Any gurus have suggestions? Sorry if that's Pyrating th' thread, Az...it's what I do best!
Reply #5 Thursday, November 5, 2009 10:08 AM
Next? A wireless printer.
Any gurus have suggestions? Sorry if that's Pyrating th' thread, Az...it's what I do best!
I'm not a guru but I'm going to be getting a wireless printer next as well. Mostly for my wife and it will be the 3-in-1 kind. I'm thinking this one:
looks pretty good. It kind of matches my wife's HP laptop and I've never had a single problem with HP printers (I hate Canon).
Reply #6 Thursday, November 5, 2009 11:36 AM
Has anyone installed and used 7 on an x86 system? Field Value
CPU Type AMD Athlon XP, 2200 MHz (11 x 200) 3200+
Would need 32 bit I assume.
Reply #7 Thursday, November 5, 2009 12:59 PM
It works great on my x86 laptop (3-4 years old, 2GB RAM). I've not had problems with the beta, RC, or actual 7 on it.
Reply #8 Thursday, November 5, 2009 1:07 PM
CPU Type AMD Athlon XP, 2200 MHz (11 x 200) 3200+
Would need 32 bit I assume.
You would have to give us some more system specs before we could tell you if it would run (amount of RAM is very important and model of video card to a lesser extent). I wouldn't bother with it with that CPU anyways. Seeing as it's about 6 years old, I doubt you'd have the performance to make a switch from Windows XP (what I assume you currently use) to Windows 7 enjoyable or really worthwhile. Would it run? Yeah, It would probably run okay (if you have around 2GB of RAM). I just don't think it would be worth you money or your time. To answer your final question, yes you assume correctly, you would have to use a 32 bit version of Windows 7.
Personally, I would take the money you would spend on buying a copy of Windows 7 and put it towards a general upgrade of your entire computer. I recently went from an Athlon XP 2600+ system to a computer with an Athlon X2 7750 (2.7GHz dual core) and the difference was light years and I highly recommend the change to anybody close to my situation (which you appear to be).
I hope that helps.
Reply #9 Thursday, November 5, 2009 1:23 PM
Next? A wireless printer.
Any gurus have suggestions? Sorry if that's Pyrating th' thread, Az...it's what I do best!
I'm not a guru but I'm going to be getting a wireless printer next as well. Mostly for my wife and it will be the 3-in-1 kind. I'm thinking this one:
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/HP+-+Photosmart+Wireless+Multifunction+Printer/+Copier/+Scanner/9364163.p?id=1218091520646&skuId=9364163
looks pretty good. It kind of matches my wife's HP laptop and I've never had a single problem with HP printers (I hate Canon).
Charvel1: take a look here....might save you some of them bucks!
Reply #10 Thursday, November 5, 2009 1:55 PM
I just bought a new laptop last nite (18.4"!!!) with Vista, and my son's copy of Win7 was delivered today, so I'll be starting tonite to install it (he can wait till mine comes in). Any suggestions for an easy install, or do you just put the CD in and follow the instructions?
Reply #12 Thursday, November 5, 2009 2:08 PM
If your not doing a clean install, remove the crapware you don't want first. defrag and optimize Vista, set up your internet connection, disable AV. Then just pop in the disk. It will scan and tell you if any software is going to be a problem (I.E. Ghost). Click next and have a seat for awhile (about two hours depending on the amount of software loaded). It's actually pretty painless IMO.
Reply #13 Thursday, November 5, 2009 6:34 PM
@ Nitro Cruiser - thanks for info, about to start
Reply #14 Thursday, November 5, 2009 6:50 PM
I did that with my vista ultimate -> win 7 professional upgrade (boot with win 7 disk, and reformat OS drive).
That way you have no leftover possible problems. And clean installs are a good thing to do every year or so anyways.
My custom install went quickly and without event. No driver/etc. problems either. Home network was immediately recognized with no problem, etc.
All in all a very nice and easy experience.
Good luck with yours (and good for you for having dad go first and son wait )
Reply #15 Thursday, November 5, 2009 7:41 PM
While I had very few early teething issues with Vista Ultimate x86, and none with Vista Home Premium x64, Win 7 is by far the best OS Microsoft has ever done... bar none. Not only is is faster, both to install and run, it is very reliable and seamless to use.
I currently run Win 7 Home premium x64 and loving it. The installation/set-up was painless and it found all my device drivers, so there were no compatability issues whatsoever and everything worked as it should from word go. However, what I'm liking most is the ease of use and the additional options (folder, personalisation, etc) that were missing in Vista.... I feel as though I have more control now, particularly as the UAC has become more user friendly.
Yup, I rate Win 7 12 out of 10.
CPU Type AMD Athlon XP, 2200 MHz (11 x 200) 3200+
Would need 32 bit I assume.
Hey Ed.
While your machine may be a little underpowered by today's standards (quad cores and etc), Win 7 is nowhere near as bloated as Vista and it requires fewer resources, so yes, your PC would be capable of running Win 7, but how well would depend on having a decent video card the amount of RAM you have... 2gb would be the minimum, I expect.
Microsoft realises that it made mistakes with Vista, in particular its hardware requirements, so Win 7 was slimmed down and designed to run on lesser machines. I ran the Win7 RC on an Intel P4 machine with 2gb RAM and a Nvidia 7800GT without issue and at respectable speeds, though understandably not as fast as my Athlon quad core with 8gb ram and a 9800GT
Ideally, a hardware upgrade or new PC would be better, but obviously when the budget doesn't allow for this you have to make the best of what you've got.... and I'm pretty sure you'd be OK with Win 7 x86 on that machine if you have 2 gb RAM and a decent video card. To remove all doubt, the best way to see if your PC will run Win 7 is to use this tool
Reply #16 Thursday, November 5, 2009 9:19 PM
'smallest/oldest' system I have Win 7 [Pro - 32bit] on is a P4 1.6 with 1gig of ram.....runs fine...
Reply #17 Thursday, November 5, 2009 11:19 PM
There ya go, Ed, You should be fine with Win 7 and that rig of yours.
My P4 is a 2.8ghz and Win 7 ran well, so your 2.2 should fly if Jafo's 1.6 runs fine.
Reply #18 Thursday, November 5, 2009 11:56 PM
Yes, Windows 7 is perfect but there is a very bad news for me (and many other gamers) is DirectX 11 which puts an end to all of my old games using DirectX 9. Now, I get back to Windows XP or maybe, I should have a dual boot for Windows XP and Windows 7 .
Reply #19 Friday, November 6, 2009 12:12 AM
Why is that?
I'm trying to work out which is my oldest game installed...looks like it'll be GrandPrix 4 .....2002
System requirements....
The following is a description of the minimum system requirements for Grand Prix 4. If your system does not meet or exceed these requirements, then the game will run incorrectly, or not at all.
Windows 98/ME/2000/XP
Pentium2 400MHz or equivalent
64Mb RAM
videocard 16Mb DirectX 8.1 compatible
soundcard DirectX 8.1 compatible
4X CD Rom drive
500 Mb Hard Drive Space
DirectX 8.1 (supplied with the game)
Reply #20 Friday, November 6, 2009 12:24 AM
BTW...
With everything maxed....getting 60fps ...whilst running 2 Virtual Machines [Win 7 Ultimate and Vista Ultimate], and several other proggies....
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Reply #1 Thursday, November 5, 2009 9:12 AM
There's sure to be something available...a vista one perhaps.
Unless it's an ancient/uncommon printer...