View Full Version : Dual boot, vista-W7RC
Pedro_The_Swift
19th May 2009, 05:05 AM
so-----
If I want to look at Windows 7 RC,,,
whats the best way of loading it to not interfere with vista?
does it require its own partition?
how big? 15-20gb?
does the release candidate download autoload?
and can I tell it where to save/run?
incisor
19th May 2009, 06:52 AM
you download it, burn it to dvd and install from it
havent dual booted it, i have it on a separate drive.
spudboy
19th May 2009, 08:38 AM
I am running it as my 'production' client (even though it is build 7068 and classified as an Evaluation Copy), and have been extremely impressed with its stability and speed. Faster and 'snappier' than Vista (which I know is not saying a lot).
Installed with a few apps (Office, etc - the normal client bits and pieces) it is taking up 19GB.
Haven't tried dual booting. Didn't want to take a chance of messing up my 'real' production machine, so just installed to another drive.
I am surprised you can still download it. I thought they cut that off a couple of months ago.
TimNZ
19th May 2009, 09:24 AM
I'm running a 3 boot option on my laptop at the moment, XP, Vista, or 7RC. My laptop has 2 physical hard drives, I have Vista on one HDD and XP and 7 on the other HDD, which is partitioned. You'd probably want at least 25GB for Win 7, just so you can load the odd application to see if it works.
Cheers,
Tim
TimNZ
19th May 2009, 07:36 PM
Once you have loaded the second OS you will need to repair the Boot Loader, otherwise you won't have the option of which OS you want to boot. I used a program called Easy BCD, very easy to use, and you can change the name of the OS's, (otherwise you get stuck with "older versions of windows" for XP).
Cheers,
Tim
https://www.aulro.com/afvb/images/imported/2009/05/520.jpg
Bytemrk
19th May 2009, 09:02 PM
Pedro, Windows 7 RC definitely dual boots smoothly with XP... cant see why Vista would be an issue.
I had the beta dual booting with XP... removed it and installed the 64 bit RC for a while and have since moved to the 32Bit RC with no hassles with my XP build at all. ( I'm running it on my laptop - a Dell Precision M4300)
Spudboy is right, its very smooth and snappy compared to Vista. I'm actually currently using it full time at work (in a 2003 AD) and its behaving perfectly.
Tim, you dont need to use 3rd party tools to play with the bootloader.. BCDedit build itto the os does it all pretty smoothly anyway.
Cheers, Mark
dmdigital
19th May 2009, 09:12 PM
... cant see why Vista would be an issue.
I'm sure that's what someone at Microsoft said once too:Rolling:
Seriously though, is it any better than Vista? I understand it is supposed to load faster (wouldn't be hard), but has it still got the terrible interface?
Bytemrk
19th May 2009, 09:29 PM
I'm sure that's what someone at Microsoft said once too:Rolling:
Seriously though, is it any better than Vista? I understand it is supposed to load faster (wouldn't be hard), but has it still got the terrible interface?
It's definitely better than Vista. I tolerated Vista at work for about 6 months before losing it and rolling back to XP.
It has a few little quirks that take some getting used to - but it is still only an RC too.. It's definitely built around the Vista architecture...but most of the annoying things that drove me away from Vista seem to be sorted.
This I am actually enjoying using. Certainly worth a try. I work in a Microsoft based corporate network - so don't have the option to go Mac or Linux. But form what I've found so far I'll keep using it.
Mark
spudboy
19th May 2009, 10:48 PM
I'm sure that's what someone at Microsoft said once too:Rolling:
Seriously though, is it any better than Vista? I understand it is supposed to load faster (wouldn't be hard), but has it still got the terrible interface?
I reckon it's a lot better than Vista. I bought a new DELL laptop which came pre-loaded wiht Vista, and I "backloaded' to XP after a week. Slow as all get out.
You have to get used to the new way the Win7 toolbar works, but that only takes a day or two. I'd say it functions more like Vista than XP, so if you don't like Vista you probably won't like Windows 7.
My main machine is running Server 2008, and Win7 is pretty similar (apart from the new toolbar features).
Pedro_The_Swift
21st May 2009, 06:07 PM
after a few days playing,,
its PROBABLY faster,,
hard to tell seeing it has NO other processes running,,
I like the Library,
I like the desktop photo rotation,
you still have to agree to installing everything,
is it better for me????
hard to tell,,
I'd need to duplicate my entire HD to see,,
maybe there will be a cheap upgrade,,
its only vista in a new suit after all,,
It'sNotWorthComplaining!
21st May 2009, 06:20 PM
I'm running the Window 7 Ultimate Rc with linux using Virtual box.
I don't think I'll be buying the release..... it doesn't light my fire. Just another version of Vista ( a bit like win 95 to Win 98.)
I think I'll just dual boot with XP for any apps that only run on Ms.
just my option
Bytemrk
21st May 2009, 08:54 PM
you still have to agree to installing everything,
Pedro,
With Vista the UAC function was either on or off... in 7 there is at least some adjustment.
Start > Run > C:\Windows\System32\UserAccountControlSettings.exe
(Assuming you installed Windows to C drive in a directory called "Windows" )
OR
Run>msconfig > select the tools tab > "Change UAC Settings"
My biggest issues with Vista previously related to it communicating with other things on our network - if often did bizarre things network wise... with 7 I have seen nothing like that at all - it seems to play far better in a larger environment than it's predecessor .
I am using it full time at the moment and I have not yet found an application that will not run smoothly on it. (many apps I use where written for far older versions of windows as well as some very recent apps.)
As for a cheap upgrade.... don't hold your breath, I am hearing rumors it won't be cheap.
Mark
HangOver
22nd May 2009, 01:28 AM
I have also found window7 to run quite nicely.
Better than vista and this running on a virtual PC running on XP so I would guess the full version will be even better and the 64bit version better again.
I only upgrade OS when work does but from what i've seen so far its worth the swap.
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