Thanks
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#1
Posted 07 August 2007 - 08:21 PM
Thanks
#2
Posted 07 August 2007 - 08:28 PM
#4
Posted 08 August 2007 - 08:00 AM
I would follow dc3's advice. I just completed the exact same task, except I wiped out XP and went with VISTA. You can also use a program called CopyWipe which you can get from here:
http://www.terabyteunlimited.com/copywipe.php Get the DOS version. since you want to boot from the CD or floppy anyway. A single pass of zeros is enough and should take approx. 2 - 5 hours depending upon the size of your drive and how much data is on it.
Boot from the XP CD, create your partitions, format them and you're off to the races.
I would also go to the Dell Support site to get all the latest drivers for your laptop. Search by model (once you decide which model you are getting) and make sure you select XP as the operating system. After XP loads up, install the drivers in this order:
1) Motherboard/Chipset
2) Integrated Graphics controller ONLY if you do NOT have a 3rd party video card
3) Video driver ONLY if you do not have an integrated card
4) Network drivers (regular & wireless LAN)
5) Sound/Audio Driver
6) Modem, Firewire (if available)
7) Mouse, Keyboard, Monitor
Now go ahead and install your other applications.
#5
Posted 08 August 2007 - 08:04 AM
Wiping the drive will remove ALL partitions including the hidden Dell recovery partition and utility partitions. If you want to keep these, then don't wipe the drive, simply write zeros to the Vista partition only, then boot from XP CD, create a new partition or use the unallocated space.
#6
Posted 08 August 2007 - 04:29 PM
#7
Posted 08 August 2007 - 09:05 PM
How to dual-boot Vista with XP http://apcmag.com/5023/dual_booting_xp_with_vista
It's a little involved so take your time and make sure this is what you want to do. Also, you don't have to use GParted to shrink your partitions. You can simply create a new partition for XP within Windows Vista from the Computer Management console under Administrative Tools, load the XP CD and reboot to the CD and install XP on the new partition. I would allow at least 40GB for the XP load.
I would suspect that you would be installing XP AFTER Vista, so you would need to go to a different page with the link given in the instructions.
Good luck.
#8
Posted 10 August 2007 - 04:20 PM
I_am_CanadianEh?, on Aug 8 2007, 09:00 AM, said:
I would follow dc3's advice. I just completed the exact same task, except I wiped out XP and went with VISTA. You can also use a program called CopyWipe which you can get from here:
http://www.terabyteunlimited.com/copywipe.php Get the DOS version. since you want to boot from the CD or floppy anyway. A single pass of zeros is enough and should take approx. 2 - 5 hours depending upon the size of your drive and how much data is on it.
Boot from the XP CD, create your partitions, format them and you're off to the races.
I would also go to the Dell Support site to get all the latest drivers for your laptop. Search by model (once you decide which model you are getting) and make sure you select XP as the operating system. After XP loads up, install the drivers in this order:
1) Motherboard/Chipset
2) Integrated Graphics controller ONLY if you do NOT have a 3rd party video card
3) Video driver ONLY if you do not have an integrated card
4) Network drivers (regular & wireless LAN)
5) Sound/Audio Driver
6) Modem, Firewire (if available)
7) Mouse, Keyboard, Monitor
Now go ahead and install your other applications.
how do i install the drivers? do i download them on a different compute and burn it to a disc then install them that way?
#9
Posted 10 August 2007 - 08:58 PM
Burn all the files to a CD or DVD.
After Windows is reinstalled and you get to your desktop, put the CD/DVD into the drive and install each driver one by one in the order I suggested. If it asks you to reboot, say YES.
#10
Posted 13 August 2007 - 04:09 PM
I_am_CanadianEh?, on Aug 8 2007, 09:04 AM, said:
Wiping the drive will remove ALL partitions including the hidden Dell recovery partition and utility partitions. If you want to keep these, then don't wipe the drive, simply write zeros to the Vista partition only, then boot from XP CD, create a new partition or use the unallocated space.
is the hidden dell recovery partition important if i have the FULL OEM Win XP Pro SP2 disc?
#12
Posted 13 August 2007 - 04:16 PM
#13
Posted 13 August 2007 - 05:36 PM
ComputerMan23, on Aug 13 2007, 05:12 PM, said:
Read this and this.
Quote
So you mean playing a game in XP and Vista that's installed on an external hard drive? I don't think you can.
#14
Posted 15 August 2007 - 08:33 AM
Quote
First, check with DELL to make sure your warranty isn't voided if you decide to delete the recovery partition.
I would keep your restore partition for now and do one of the following:
Where did you get the OEM CD? If it's specific for your DELL you should be fine. If it's unbranded (ie: purchased from an online reseller) make sure its genuine by going to this site.
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/howtote...a1043249fa.mspx
When using an OEM version please bare in mind
- it is not transferrable to another computer
- if you change the motherboard, you need to purchase another copy of Windows
- there is no technical support if you purchased this from an online store. If you got it from DELL, then DELL will support it

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