Should I switch to Windows 7


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I want to upgrade, but I'm not sure if I should. I have XP right now.

If I do decide to upgrade, should I do a clean install or upgrade to Vista and then to Windows 7?

I don't want to lose what I already have on my hard drive and have to reinstall a bunch of stuff.

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I want to upgrade, but I'm not sure if I should. I have XP right now.

If I do decide to upgrade, should I do a clean install or upgrade to Vista and then to Windows 7?

I don't want to lose what I already have on my hard drive and have to reinstall a bunch of stuff.

I always recommend a reinstall...not an upgrade as there have been issues with this method (drivers, non-functioning software bits, etc.) not to mention it can be slow...So basically from just reading your last sentence, I don't recommend that you switch to Windows 7 if you're reluctant to put alot time and effort into it.

What are your hardware specs anyhow?

I want to upgrade, but I'm not sure if I should. I have XP right now.

If I do decide to upgrade, should I do a clean install or upgrade to Vista and then to Windows 7?

I don't want to lose what I already have on my hard drive and have to reinstall a bunch of stuff.

Use PCMover to do an upgrade from XP to Windows 7. This is the ONLY program I know of that will migrate ALL of your XP settings and files after a clean install. PCMover is equal to the Easy Transfer that is used to migrate Vista to Windows 7.

Though you probably should run the upgrade adviser -

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details...;displayLang=en

Make sure your hardware supports it though fully- No sense wasting a bunch of money when your hardware limits you-

That is what a friend suggested....

I always recommend a reinstall...not an upgrade as there have been issues with this method (drivers, non-functioning software bits, etc.) not to mention it can be slow...So basically from just reading your last sentence, I don't recommend that you switch to Windows 7 if you're reluctant to put alot time and effort into it.

What are your hardware specs anyhow?

Specs:

Intel Core 2 CPU 6400 @ 2.13GHz

GeForce 8800 GTS

4GB DDR2 Ram

Specs:

Intel Core 2 CPU 6400 @ 2.13GHz

GeForce 8800 GTS

4GB DDR2 Ram

That looks fair.

I would recommend Win7. I was a stiff XP user 'til the public beta of 7 (curiosity got the best of me) and dual booted between the two until I found myself neglecting XP. I have fewer 3rd party programs now and 7 requires much less upkeep...I think I had over a thousand tweaks to XP...or it seemed like it.

what I did was keep my old OS in the last few moves to another OS in the event I wanted to move back. I made and image of XP and I may still have it :laugh: and now I have a backup of Vista as well.

I am sticking with Win7, I used Vista and it was good that I did because it was easier to go from XP to Vista to Win7 than to go from XP straight to Win7 :)

Hard drives are cheap :)

i would also recommend you switch because there are certainly a lot of ease of use and convenience benefits to 7 that weren't even in vista. back when i had xp i used 2-3 applications just to make the taskbar act the way i want it to, but 7 is already there. which brings me to the next part of your question.

upgrading usually doesn't work well and you are better off starting with a clean system. it really doesn't take that long to reinstall everything you NEED. you will find out as the case was for me with these taskbar apps that a lot of applications i ran on XP were no longer needed in 7 and it would have been a waste of space to transfer them over not to mention they would have simply not worked. so just back up your stuff and do a clean install. I like to download and save everything i need before i do the reinstalling. that way i spend a few days preparing for the transfer and only an hour installing and moving everything back.

i would also recommend you switch because there are certainly a lot of ease of use and convenience benefits to 7 that weren't even in vista. back when i had xp i used 2-3 applications just to make the taskbar act the way i want it to, but 7 is already there. which brings me to the next part of your question.

upgrading usually doesn't work well and you are better off starting with a clean system. it really doesn't take that long to reinstall everything you NEED. you will find out as the case was for me with these taskbar apps that a lot of applications i ran on XP were no longer needed in 7 and it would have been a waste of space to transfer them over not to mention they would have simply not worked. so just back up your stuff and do a clean install. I like to download and save everything i need before i do the reinstalling. that way i spend a few days preparing for the transfer and only an hour installing and moving everything back.

There is no upgrade from XP to Windows 7. It does require a fresh install. Use PCMover and transfer all your files and settings. I have completed over a dozen XP to Windows 7 installs and it has worked flawless in every instance. Amazing program.

BTW; Upgrding a stable Vista to Windows 7 is by far the best that Microsoft has made available to those that want to follow that path, to date. It just works.

I would recommend windows 7 specially with machine like yours... you have a nice spec pc...

here is some tip...

manually(or software) backup the data to an external hardrive or a different drive(D:\ , E:\ etc)...

you can only do a clean install since u r upgrading from windows xp.

I usaully do a clean install once in 4 months so i know some settings which needs to retain like itunes playlist,IE fav ect

back up those settings and do a fresh install of windows 7 and restore all the settings to 7..

Its just a one time deal.... To have a better performance do a clean install....

CactusZac098,

When migrating from Windows XP to Windows 7 you will not have an "in place upgrade" option. You will however have the option to select "custom" install when prompted. The Windows 7 install process will then copy all of your data in "My Documents" over to a Windows.old folder within Windows 7 itself. All applications and documents stored in other locations will have to be reinstalled / transferred manually.

For more information on the Windows 7 Upgrade, please go here: http://bit.ly/3DvynK

For additional assistance with the migration of Windows XP to Windows 7, please go here: http://<< spam >>/mhbep4

Jessica

Microsoft Windows Client Team

That looks fair.

I think I had over a thousand tweaks to XP...or it seemed like it.

My experience exactly. I have even less tweaks than when I was running Vista plus it uses about 10% less RAM than Vista even though it does the same things I want it too. I would recommend Windows 7, bite the bullet and do a fresh install. Using a migration program is not a bad idea.

You have a very good system for it. First backup all documents and setups to another drive. I will also recommend going for 64 bit. Just download all drivers before you install Windows. (Y)

You beat me to it, I certainly recommend going 64-bit with Windows 7, it just feels...well....faster and more stable than the 32-bit version, even though thats probably not true.

I won't be going back to 32-bit...ever.

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