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Mike Brannigan
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"VS" <> wrote in message
news:15987D6A-DC7F-4E35-8CE8-... > Hi, > > Tried to look for a solution but could not find in previous posts. > > Here is my problem but first of all > i am not a computer expert but can follow the commands easily as > suggested. > > I have a Sony notebook with windows vista pre-installed and no windows > DVD. > I want to install windows xp on this note book along with keeping the > vista. > I did hard disk formatting in NTFS, made two partition and installed > windows > xp in one partition. windows xp worked fine as expected. > > Then i used the recovery DVD for windows vista and tried to install > windopws > vista from this. The instalation went well but when it was finished and > computer restarted there was no option for dual boot. On booting vista i > checked the partition where i had installed xp..I found that vista > installed > itself in that partition and xp was removed. > > Can anyone guide me how to install both xp and vista for dual boot using > windows xp cd to install and using recovery DVD to install vista. I will > be > greatful to all suggestions. > > Thanks > VS You will not be able to do what you want with your Sony recovery DVD. The recovery DVD will put the system back to as shipped from the factory. If you wish to do a regular install you ill need to purchase a full copy of Windows Vista. -- Mike Brannigan |
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Rick Rogers
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Hi,
You can: 1) Use Virtual PC to install XP to, no partitioning necessary: http://www.microsoft.com/windows/pro...c/default.mspx 2) Use VistaBootPro from http://www.pro-networks.org/vistabootpro/intro.php 3) Use BootIT NG to manage and install the bootloader from each OS: http://www.terabyteunlimited.com -- Best of Luck, Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/ Windows help - www.rickrogers.org "VS" <> wrote in message news:15987D6A-DC7F-4E35-8CE8-... > Hi, > > Tried to look for a solution but could not find in previous posts. > > Here is my problem but first of all > i am not a computer expert but can follow the commands easily as > suggested. > > I have a Sony notebook with windows vista pre-installed and no windows > DVD. > I want to install windows xp on this note book along with keeping the > vista. > I did hard disk formatting in NTFS, made two partition and installed > windows > xp in one partition. windows xp worked fine as expected. > > Then i used the recovery DVD for windows vista and tried to install > windopws > vista from this. The instalation went well but when it was finished and > computer restarted there was no option for dual boot. On booting vista i > checked the partition where i had installed xp..I found that vista > installed > itself in that partition and xp was removed. > > Can anyone guide me how to install both xp and vista for dual boot using > windows xp cd to install and using recovery DVD to install vista. I will > be > greatful to all suggestions. > > Thanks > VS |
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loaderopp
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Your recovery disk will not work for a dual boot!!
Recovery disks partition and format your computers drive to factory specs, puts your system back to (when you took it out of the box) for the first time. If you want to dual boot you will need to either Buy a full version of vista or install another drive so you can install Xp on it with your vista install on the other. you would end up with 2 harddrives, and can boot from either drive with your system bios on startup. the 2 drive sytem works great just unplug your installed vista drive while you install Xp on the other, then reconnect your vista drive and off you go. 2 O/S ON 1 DRIVE wipe your drive clean! with 2 partitions install XP on one partition first ,And vista second, on the other partition, install a boot loader and you off the the races. means reinstalling 2 O/S from scratch Good luck "VS" wrote: > Hi, > > Tried to look for a solution but could not find in previous posts. > > Here is my problem but first of all > i am not a computer expert but can follow the commands easily as suggested. > > I have a Sony notebook with windows vista pre-installed and no windows DVD. > I want to install windows xp on this note book along with keeping the vista. > I did hard disk formatting in NTFS, made two partition and installed windows > xp in one partition. windows xp worked fine as expected. > > Then i used the recovery DVD for windows vista and tried to install windopws > vista from this. The instalation went well but when it was finished and > computer restarted there was no option for dual boot. On booting vista i > checked the partition where i had installed xp..I found that vista installed > itself in that partition and xp was removed. > > Can anyone guide me how to install both xp and vista for dual boot using > windows xp cd to install and using recovery DVD to install vista. I will be > greatful to all suggestions. > > Thanks > VS |
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DanR
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"VS" <> wrote in message news:15987D6A-DC7F-4E35-8CE8-... > Hi, > > Tried to look for a solution but could not find in previous posts. > > Here is my problem but first of all > i am not a computer expert but can follow the commands easily as > suggested. > > I have a Sony notebook with windows vista pre-installed and no windows > DVD. > I want to install windows xp on this note book along with keeping the > vista. > I did hard disk formatting in NTFS, made two partition and installed > windows > xp in one partition. windows xp worked fine as expected. > > Then i used the recovery DVD for windows vista and tried to install > windopws > vista from this. The instalation went well but when it was finished and > computer restarted there was no option for dual boot. On booting vista i > checked the partition where i had installed xp..I found that vista > installed > itself in that partition and xp was removed. > > Can anyone guide me how to install both xp and vista for dual boot using > windows xp cd to install and using recovery DVD to install vista. I will > be > greatful to all suggestions. > > Thanks > VS Can be done. Probably need to use your recovery DVD to get Vista back and running. Then make sure you have a second partition large enough for XP. Follow instructions here: http://www.pro-networks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=88231 You said you installed XP successfully so I assume you have an XP installation CD and valid product code. |
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DanR
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"DanR" <> wrote in message news:... > > "VS" <> wrote in message > news:15987D6A-DC7F-4E35-8CE8-... >> Hi, >> >> Tried to look for a solution but could not find in previous posts. >> >> Here is my problem but first of all >> i am not a computer expert but can follow the commands easily as >> suggested. >> >> I have a Sony notebook with windows vista pre-installed and no windows >> DVD. >> I want to install windows xp on this note book along with keeping the >> vista. >> I did hard disk formatting in NTFS, made two partition and installed >> windows >> xp in one partition. windows xp worked fine as expected. >> >> Then i used the recovery DVD for windows vista and tried to install >> windopws >> vista from this. The instalation went well but when it was finished and >> computer restarted there was no option for dual boot. On booting vista i >> checked the partition where i had installed xp..I found that vista >> installed >> itself in that partition and xp was removed. >> >> Can anyone guide me how to install both xp and vista for dual boot using >> windows xp cd to install and using recovery DVD to install vista. I will >> be >> greatful to all suggestions. >> >> Thanks >> VS > > Can be done. > Probably need to use your recovery DVD to get Vista back and running. Then > make sure you have a second partition large enough for XP. > Follow instructions here: > http://www.pro-networks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=88231 > You said you installed XP successfully so I assume you have an XP > installation CD and valid product code. One more thing. As you follow the instructions you will be told to "shrink" your C: volume to make room for another partition where you will install XP. It could be that you can not shrink the C: partition enough to make for adaquate room. You won't know this until you try. If this does happen you would need 3rd party hard drive managing software. I'm not familure enough with these apps to recommend one. |
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Chad Harris
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Hi VS--
I respectfully don't believe this can be done with a Recovery DVD for Vista and agree with what Mike Brannigan has already pointed out. I think you will need a Vista DVD to spell Vista. If you had used a Vista DVD, you might be able to use the very helpful apps Rick suggested to get your bootloaders in order for the dual boot, but I'm skeptical you can do this with *the recovery DVD in the equation instead of a real Windows Vista. Of course you can try. One more caveat is that a general rule for success when dual or multibooting with two different Windows Operating systems is to *always install the legacy or older OS, i.e. Win XP in your case first because if you don't, you are very likely to have problems booting them both and will probably overwrite one of the bootloaders. There is an MSKB written for that situation: You cannot start Windows XP after you install Windows Vista in a dual-boot configuration together with Windows XP http://support.microsoft.com/kb/927817/en-us I don't believe this will help you now though, because you didn't install Windows Vista--you tried to substitute a recovery DVD which *simply does not have full Vista code and cannot be used to substitute for it. My recommendation to you is to purchase a Vista DVD and then install Windows XP first on one partition and then run the Vista setup from there if you want to preserve your same drive letters. This is very easy to do, and you will have an Advanced screen in the Vista setup where you can select what partition you want to install your Vista onto: Where do you want to install Windows Vista (in setup): http://www.winsupersite.com/images/r...install_13.jpg Good luck, CH "VS" <> wrote in message news:15987D6A-DC7F-4E35-8CE8-... > Hi, > > Tried to look for a solution but could not find in previous posts. > > Here is my problem but first of all > i am not a computer expert but can follow the commands easily as > suggested. > > I have a Sony notebook with windows vista pre-installed and no windows > DVD. > I want to install windows xp on this note book along with keeping the > vista. > I did hard disk formatting in NTFS, made two partition and installed > windows > xp in one partition. windows xp worked fine as expected. > > Then i used the recovery DVD for windows vista and tried to install > windopws > vista from this. The instalation went well but when it was finished and > computer restarted there was no option for dual boot. On booting vista i > checked the partition where i had installed xp..I found that vista > installed > itself in that partition and xp was removed. > > Can anyone guide me how to install both xp and vista for dual boot using > windows xp cd to install and using recovery DVD to install vista. I will > be > greatful to all suggestions. > > Thanks > VS |
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DanR
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Chad, I have no doubt your method would work however I did indeed create a
dual boot system using the instructions from the page I noted above. So I know 100% for sure you can install XP after Vista is loaded on a C: drive. If the OP uses the Vista restore disk to put Vista on his computer (factory fresh) he will have a normal computer running Vista just like he would have if he had the retail Vista DVD. He can then use "those" instructions to load Vista on a second partition. It will work. In my case I used a second hard drive but the procedure is the same. Only issue he might have is shrinking his C: drive down enough to make room for XP on the future D: drive. (partition) "VistaProBoot" will take care of dual booting. After installing XP... Vista will be inaccessible until VistaProBoot is run from XP. Then everything is fine and dandy. "Chad Harris" <vistaneedsmuchowork.net> wrote in message news:%... > Hi VS-- > > I respectfully don't believe this can be done with a Recovery DVD for > Vista and agree with what Mike Brannigan has already pointed out. I > think you will need a Vista DVD to spell Vista. If you had used a Vista > DVD, you might be able to use the very helpful apps Rick suggested to get > your bootloaders in order for the dual boot, but I'm skeptical you can do > this with *the recovery DVD in the equation instead of a real Windows > Vista. Of course you can try. > > One more caveat is that a general rule for success when dual or > multibooting with two different Windows Operating systems is to *always > install the legacy or older OS, i.e. Win XP in your case first because if > you don't, you are very likely to have problems booting them both and > will probably overwrite one of the bootloaders. There is an MSKB written > for that situation: > > You cannot start Windows XP after you install Windows Vista in a dual-boot > configuration together with Windows XP > http://support.microsoft.com/kb/927817/en-us > > I don't believe this will help you now though, because you didn't install > Windows Vista--you tried to substitute a recovery DVD which *simply does > not have full Vista code and cannot be used to substitute for it. > > My recommendation to you is to purchase a Vista DVD and then install > Windows XP first on one partition and then run the Vista setup from there > if you want to preserve your same drive letters. This is very easy to do, > and you will have an Advanced screen in the Vista setup where you can > select what partition you want to install your Vista onto: > > Where do you want to install Windows Vista (in setup): > http://www.winsupersite.com/images/r...install_13.jpg > > Good luck, > > CH > > "VS" <> wrote in message > news:15987D6A-DC7F-4E35-8CE8-... >> Hi, >> >> Tried to look for a solution but could not find in previous posts. >> >> Here is my problem but first of all >> i am not a computer expert but can follow the commands easily as >> suggested. >> >> I have a Sony notebook with windows vista pre-installed and no windows >> DVD. >> I want to install windows xp on this note book along with keeping the >> vista. >> I did hard disk formatting in NTFS, made two partition and installed >> windows >> xp in one partition. windows xp worked fine as expected. >> >> Then i used the recovery DVD for windows vista and tried to install >> windopws >> vista from this. The instalation went well but when it was finished and >> computer restarted there was no option for dual boot. On booting vista i >> checked the partition where i had installed xp..I found that vista >> installed >> itself in that partition and xp was removed. >> >> Can anyone guide me how to install both xp and vista for dual boot using >> windows xp cd to install and using recovery DVD to install vista. I will >> be >> greatful to all suggestions. >> >> Thanks >> VS > |
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DanR
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Typo:
He can then use "those" instructions to load Vista on a second partition. Should read: He can then use "those" instructions to load XP on a second partition. "DanR" <> wrote in message news:... > Chad, I have no doubt your method would work however I did indeed create a > dual boot system using the instructions from the page I noted above. > So I know 100% for sure you can install XP after Vista is loaded on a C: > drive. > If the OP uses the Vista restore disk to put Vista on his computer > (factory fresh) he will have a normal computer running Vista just like he > would have if he had the retail Vista DVD. > He can then use "those" instructions to load Vista on a second partition. > It will work. In my case I used a second hard drive but the procedure is > the same. Only issue he might have is shrinking his C: drive down enough > to make room for XP on the future D: drive. (partition) > "VistaProBoot" will take care of dual booting. After installing XP... > Vista will be inaccessible until VistaProBoot is run from XP. Then > everything is fine and dandy. > > "Chad Harris" <vistaneedsmuchowork.net> wrote in message > news:%... >> Hi VS-- >> >> I respectfully don't believe this can be done with a Recovery DVD for >> Vista and agree with what Mike Brannigan has already pointed out. I >> think you will need a Vista DVD to spell Vista. If you had used a Vista >> DVD, you might be able to use the very helpful apps Rick suggested to get >> your bootloaders in order for the dual boot, but I'm skeptical you can do >> this with *the recovery DVD in the equation instead of a real Windows >> Vista. Of course you can try. >> >> One more caveat is that a general rule for success when dual or >> multibooting with two different Windows Operating systems is to *always >> install the legacy or older OS, i.e. Win XP in your case first because if >> you don't, you are very likely to have problems booting them both and >> will probably overwrite one of the bootloaders. There is an MSKB written >> for that situation: >> >> You cannot start Windows XP after you install Windows Vista in a >> dual-boot >> configuration together with Windows XP >> http://support.microsoft.com/kb/927817/en-us >> >> I don't believe this will help you now though, because you didn't install >> Windows Vista--you tried to substitute a recovery DVD which *simply does >> not have full Vista code and cannot be used to substitute for it. >> >> My recommendation to you is to purchase a Vista DVD and then install >> Windows XP first on one partition and then run the Vista setup from there >> if you want to preserve your same drive letters. This is very easy to >> do, and you will have an Advanced screen in the Vista setup where you can >> select what partition you want to install your Vista onto: >> >> Where do you want to install Windows Vista (in setup): >> http://www.winsupersite.com/images/r...install_13.jpg >> >> Good luck, >> >> CH >> >> "VS" <> wrote in message >> news:15987D6A-DC7F-4E35-8CE8-... >>> Hi, >>> >>> Tried to look for a solution but could not find in previous posts. >>> >>> Here is my problem but first of all >>> i am not a computer expert but can follow the commands easily as >>> suggested. >>> >>> I have a Sony notebook with windows vista pre-installed and no windows >>> DVD. >>> I want to install windows xp on this note book along with keeping the >>> vista. >>> I did hard disk formatting in NTFS, made two partition and installed >>> windows >>> xp in one partition. windows xp worked fine as expected. >>> >>> Then i used the recovery DVD for windows vista and tried to install >>> windopws >>> vista from this. The instalation went well but when it was finished and >>> computer restarted there was no option for dual boot. On booting vista i >>> checked the partition where i had installed xp..I found that vista >>> installed >>> itself in that partition and xp was removed. >>> >>> Can anyone guide me how to install both xp and vista for dual boot using >>> windows xp cd to install and using recovery DVD to install vista. I will >>> be >>> greatful to all suggestions. >>> >>> Thanks >>> VS >> > |
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Chad Harris
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Hi DanR--
1) If you install XP after Vista has been installed and want to set up a dual boot, I didn't say it can't happen; I said it will happen successfully a small percent of the time and the literature on dual boot is replete with the caveat to install the older OS first. I offered an MSKB for when there are problems because Vista was installed first. What you know for sure is you got lucky with an XP install second; but in 100 tries you would find very few successes. My method as to installs of OS's to set up a dual boot is to install the older one first, but most people subscribe to it. In a thousand tries in a lab environment a recovery CD will not equal XP nor will a recovery DVD equal Vista almost every time. "If the OP uses the Vista restore disk to put Vista on his computer (factory fresh) he will have a normal computer running Vista just like he would have if he had the retail Vista DVD." I know this won't happen above 90% of the time if ever. I think you mean Vista Boot Pro not Vista Pro Boot. I have been aware of it wsince the early days of the Vista Beta and recommended it more times than I can count when it's appropriate. I don't think it will help the OP working with a recovery DVD. ***How MSFT Greed Prevents Millions Of End Users From Having a Vista DVD When They Buy A New Computer*** First of all there are approximately 300 Named OEM partners. The reason that restore or recovery discs exist at all is pure Greed on the part of MSFT and the OEMs. MSFT forces this despite all the BS from the MSFT lackeys that abound--and besides selected bloggers who have been bribed with laptops and other expensive hardware goodies to support MSFT in the last year--yes girls and boys MSFT pays bribes to so-called objective bloggers to shill for them in the form of free computers and software. Dell is the one exception. When the OEM division of MSFT led by Accountant (not trained in computer engineering) Scott Di Valerio who is VP for OEM) sets up contracts with the 300 OEM named partners MSFT demands and stipuolates that they will not ship a Vista DVD. What happens then is a code short crap substitute gets shipped and is called a recovery disc (or you called it a restore disc). It is not Vista and in the realm of XP it is not XP. It does not have all the Vista code. And most importantly statistically it works a small percent of the time. That's why a repair install is a very important tool in XP, and since Win RE does not work much of the time it remains an important tool in Vista. Tio do one, you can't use a recovery disc. You must have a Vista DVD--and that goes for Win RE's tools as well unless your enterprise has a setup with MSFT for a way to pre-install Win Re. Win RE can also be pre-installed by the end user--however they need a genuine Vista DVD to do that. Di Valerio doesn't care if MSFT customers can recover with a recovery DVD--he wants to force them to buy a retail Vista. The setup engineers at MSFT haven't had the balls to stand up to the sales arm even though they know well that without a Vista DVD the customer has no access to most of their recovery tools including Win RE and a repair install. CH I'd like to give a big shout out to the West Wing who is far and away the most successful killing machine in the history of the U.S. The same amount of kids die in an American uniform every week that died at Virginia Tech. More than that number of Iraquis die every day since the US bumbled in like a retarded bull in a China shop. FRANK RICH: *Iraq Is the Ultimate Aphrodisiac* New York Times Sunday 4/22/07 PRESIDENT BUSH has skipped the funerals of the troops he sent to Iraq. He took his sweet time to get to Katrina-devastated New Orleans. But last week he raced to Virginia Tech with an alacrity not seen since he hustled from Crawford to Washington to sign a bill interfering in Terri Schiavo’s end-of-life medical care. Mr. Bush assumes the role of mourner in chief on a selective basis, and, as usual with the decider, the decisive factor is politics. Let Walter Reed erupt in scandal, and he’ll take six weeks to show his face — and on a Friday at that, to hide the story in the Saturday papers. The heinous slaughter in Blacksburg, Va., by contrast, was a rare opportunity for him to ostentatiously feel the pain of families whose suffering cannot be blamed on the administration. But he couldn’t inspire the kind of public acclaim that followed his post-9/11 visit to ground zero or the political comeback that buoyed his predecessor after Oklahoma City. The cancer on the Bush White House, Iraq, is now spreading too fast. The president had barely returned to Washington when the empty hope of the “surge” was hideously mocked by a one-day Baghdad civilian death toll more than five times that of Blacksburg’s. McClatchy Newspapers reported that the death rate for American troops over the past six months was at its all-time high for this war. At home, the president is also hobbled by the Iraq cancer’s metastasis — the twin implosions of Alberto Gonzales and Paul Wolfowitz. Technically, both men have been pilloried for sins unrelated to the war. The attorney general has repeatedly been caught changing his story about the extent of his involvement in purging eight federal prosecutors. The Financial Times caught the former deputy secretary of defense turned World Bank president privately dictating the extravagant terms of a State Department sinecure for a crony (a k a romantic partner) that showers her with more take-home pay than Condoleezza Rice. Yet each man’s latest infractions, however serious, are mere misdemeanors next to their roles in the Iraq war. What’s being lost in the Beltway uproar is the extent to which the lying, cronyism and arrogance showcased by the current scandals are of a piece with the lying, cronyism and arrogance that led to all the military funerals that Mr. Bush dares not attend. Having slept through the fraudulent selling of the war, Washington is still having trouble confronting the big picture of the Bush White House. Its dense web of deceit is the deliberate product of its amoral culture, not a haphazard potpourri of individual blunders. Mr. Gonzales’s politicizing of the Justice Department is a mere bagatelle next to his role as White House counsel in 2002, when he helped shape the administration’s legal argument to justify torture. That paved the way for Abu Ghraib, the episode that destroyed America’s image and gave terrorists a moral victory. But his efforts to sabotage national security didn’t end there. In a front-page exposé lost in the Imus avalanche two Sundays ago, The Washington Post uncovered Mr. Gonzales’s reckless role in vetting the nomination of Bernard Kerik as secretary of homeland security in December 2004. Mr. Kerik, you may recall, withdrew from consideration for that cabinet post after a week of embarrassing headlines. Back then, the White House ducked any culpability for the mess by attributing it to a single legal issue, a supposedly undocumented nanny, and by pinning it on a single, nonadministration scapegoat, Mr. Kerik’s longtime patron, Rudy Giuliani. The president’s spokesman at the time, Scott McClellan, told reporters that the White House had had “no reason to believe” that Mr. Kerik lied during his vetting process and that it would be inaccurate to say that process had been rushed. THANKS to John Solomon and Peter Baker of The Post, we now know that Mr. McClellan’s spin was no more accurate than his exoneration of Karl Rove and Scooter Libby in the Wilson leak case. The Kerik vetting process was indeed rushed — by Mr. Gonzales — and the administration had every reason to believe that it was turning over homeland security to a liar. Mr. Gonzales was privy from the get-go to a Kerik dossier ablaze with red flags pointing to “questionable financial deals, an ethics violation, allegations of mismanagement and a top deputy prosecuted for corruption,” not to mention a “friendship with a businessman who was linked to organized crime.” Yet Mr. Gonzales and the president persisted in shoving Mr. Kerik into the top job of an already troubled federal department encompassing 22 agencies, 180,000 employees and the very safety of America in the post-9/11 era. Mr. Kerik may soon face federal charges, and at a most inopportune time for the Giuliani presidential campaign. But it’s as a paradigm of the Bush White House’s waging of the Iraq war that the Kerik case is most telling. The crucial point to remember is this: Even had there been no alleged improprieties in the former police chief’s New York résumé, there still would have been his public record in Iraq to disqualify him from any administration job. The year before Mr. Kerik’s nomination to the cabinet, he was dispatched by the president to take charge of training the Iraqi police — and completely failed at that mission. As Rajiv Chandrasekaran recounts in his invaluable chronicle of Green Zone shenanigans, “Imperial Life in the Emerald City,” Mr. Kerik slept all day and held only two staff meetings, one upon arrival and one for the benefit of a Times reporter doing a profile. Rather than train Iraqi police, Mr. Kerik gave upbeat McCain-esque appraisals of the dandy shopping in Baghdad’s markets. Had Mr. Kerik actually helped stand up an Iraqi police force instead of hastening its descent into a haven for sectarian death squads, there might not now be extended tours for American troops in an open-ended escalation of the war. But in the White House’s priorities, rebuilding Iraq came in a poor third to cronyism and domestic politics. Mr. Kerik’s P.R. usefulness as a symbol of 9/11 was particularly irresistible to an administration that has exploited the carnage of 9/11 in ways both grandiose (to gin up the Iraq invasion) and tacky (in 2004 campaign ads). Mr. Kerik was an exploiter of 9/11 in his own right: he had commandeered an apartment assigned to ground zero police and rescue workers to carry out his extramarital tryst with the publisher Judith Regan. The sex angle of Mr. Wolfowitz’s scandal is a comparable symptom of the hubris that warped the judgment of those in power after 9/11. Not only did he help secure Shaha Riza her over-the-top raise in 2005, but as The Times reported, he also helped get her a junket to Iraq when he was riding high at the Pentagon in 2003. No one seems to know what she actually accomplished there, but the bill was paid by a Defense Department contractor that has since come under official scrutiny for its noncompetitive contracts and poor performance. So it went with the entire Iraq fiasco. You don’t have to be a cynic to ask if the White House’s practice of bestowing better jobs on those who bungled the war might be a form of hush money. Mr. Wolfowitz was promoted to the World Bank despite a Pentagon record that included (in part) his prewar hyping of bogus intelligence about W.M.D. and a nonexistent 9/11-Saddam connection; his assurance to the world that Iraq’s oil revenues would pay for reconstruction; and his public humiliation of Gen. Eric Shinseki after the general dared tell Congress (correctly) that several hundred thousand troops would be needed to secure Iraq after the invasion. Once the war began, Mr. Wolfowitz cited national security to bar businesses from noncoalition countries (like Germany) from competing for major contracts in Iraq. That helped ensure the disastrous monopoly of Halliburton and other White House-connected companies, including the one that employed Ms. Riza. Had Iraqi reconstruction, like the training of Iraqi police, not been betrayed by politics and cronyism, the Iraq story might have a different ending. But maybe not all that different. The cancer on the Bush White House connects and contaminates all its organs. It’s no surprise that one United States attorney fired without plausible cause by the Gonzales Justice Department, Carol Lam, was in hot pursuit of defense contractors with administration connections. Or that another crony brought by Mr. Wolfowitz to the World Bank was caught asking the Air Force secretary to secure a job for her brother at a defense contractor while she was overseeing aspects of the Air Force budget at the White House. A government with values this sleazy couldn’t possibly win a war. Like the C.I.A. leak case, each new scandal is filling in a different piece of the elaborate White House scheme to cover up the lies that took us into Iraq and the failures that keep us mired there. As the cover-up unravels and Congress steps up its confrontation over the war’s endgame, our desperate president is reverting to his old fear-mongering habit of invoking 9/11 incessantly in every speech. The more we learn, the more it’s clear that he’s the one with reason to be afraid. "DanR" <> wrote in message news:... > Chad, I have no doubt your method would work however I did indeed create a > dual boot system using the instructions from the page I noted above. > So I know 100% for sure you can install XP after Vista is loaded on a C: > drive. > If the OP uses the Vista restore disk to put Vista on his computer > (factory fresh) he will have a normal computer running Vista just like he > would have if he had the retail Vista DVD. > He can then use "those" instructions to load Vista on a second partition. > It will work. In my case I used a second hard drive but the procedure is > the same. Only issue he might have is shrinking his C: drive down enough > to make room for XP on the future D: drive. (partition) > "VistaProBoot" will take care of dual booting. After installing XP... > Vista will be inaccessible until VistaProBoot is run from XP. Then > everything is fine and dandy. > > "Chad Harris" <vistaneedsmuchowork.net> wrote in message > news:%... >> Hi VS-- >> >> I respectfully don't believe this can be done with a Recovery DVD for >> Vista and agree with what Mike Brannigan has already pointed out. I >> think you will need a Vista DVD to spell Vista. If you had used a Vista >> DVD, you might be able to use the very helpful apps Rick suggested to get >> your bootloaders in order for the dual boot, but I'm skeptical you can do >> this with *the recovery DVD in the equation instead of a real Windows >> Vista. Of course you can try. >> >> One more caveat is that a general rule for success when dual or >> multibooting with two different Windows Operating systems is to *always >> install the legacy or older OS, i.e. Win XP in your case first because if >> you don't, you are very likely to have problems booting them both and >> will probably overwrite one of the bootloaders. There is an MSKB written >> for that situation: >> >> You cannot start Windows XP after you install Windows Vista in a >> dual-boot >> configuration together with Windows XP >> http://support.microsoft.com/kb/927817/en-us >> >> I don't believe this will help you now though, because you didn't install >> Windows Vista--you tried to substitute a recovery DVD which *simply does >> not have full Vista code and cannot be used to substitute for it. >> >> My recommendation to you is to purchase a Vista DVD and then install >> Windows XP first on one partition and then run the Vista setup from there >> if you want to preserve your same drive letters. This is very easy to >> do, and you will have an Advanced screen in the Vista setup where you can >> select what partition you want to install your Vista onto: >> >> Where do you want to install Windows Vista (in setup): >> http://www.winsupersite.com/images/r...install_13.jpg >> >> Good luck, >> >> CH >> >> "VS" <> wrote in message >> news:15987D6A-DC7F-4E35-8CE8-... >>> Hi, >>> >>> Tried to look for a solution but could not find in previous posts. >>> >>> Here is my problem but first of all >>> i am not a computer expert but can follow the commands easily as >>> suggested. >>> >>> I have a Sony notebook with windows vista pre-installed and no windows >>> DVD. >>> I want to install windows xp on this note book along with keeping the >>> vista. >>> I did hard disk formatting in NTFS, made two partition and installed >>> windows >>> xp in one partition. windows xp worked fine as expected. >>> >>> Then i used the recovery DVD for windows vista and tried to install >>> windopws >>> vista from this. The instalation went well but when it was finished and >>> computer restarted there was no option for dual boot. On booting vista i >>> checked the partition where i had installed xp..I found that vista >>> installed >>> itself in that partition and xp was removed. >>> >>> Can anyone guide me how to install both xp and vista for dual boot using >>> windows xp cd to install and using recovery DVD to install vista. I will >>> be >>> greatful to all suggestions. >>> >>> Thanks >>> VS >> > |
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