On Mon, 8 Feb 2010 11:40:04 -0800, "Ralph"
<> wrote:
> Bought a Dell 1705 Inspiron laptop back in March '07, with Vista. Wish I
> had gotten XP Pro instead. Some of my programs just don't like Vista and I
> find my laptop runs very sluggishly.
>
> Wifes Dell Desktop is running XP Pro and works fine. Runs all the programs
> as they are supposed to run. Older but faster than my laptop.
>
> I had an older laptop that came with Windows 98. As it got tired, I bought
> XP Home for it, worked OK, but then the laptop died.
>
> So, I have a copy of XP Home that I bought and paid for, is no longer
> installed on any computer, and I am thinking of using on the 1705. I
> assume I am legally entitled to do this.
If yours is a retail copy, yes you are. But if what you bought was an
OEM copy (because it was cheaper than a retail copy), no you are not.
> I understand I will need to partition the HD and do some other things before
> XP can be used.
Not exactly. When you do a clean installation, the first step in that
installation will be to create a partition on the drive. You do not
have to do it first.
> The questions are:
>
> Will I get improved performance?
Maybe, maybe not. Without any knowledge of what the hardware is, I
can't tell. Please describe it, and especially tell us how much RAM is
installed. Vista needs more RAM than XP does, and if you don't have
enough, yes, XP will give you better performance. But if it were me,
and you have less than 2GB of RAM, instead of installing XP I'd
install more RAM.
Also, before you do this, be sure that XP drivers exist for this
laptop.
> What kind of problems can I reasonably expect from such a dual system?
A dual system? You're planning on dual-booting? You didn't say
anything about that.
Why do you want to dual-boot? If your hardware isn't adequate for
Vista (and my suspicion is that it isn't), my advice is to either
upgrade the hardware or change to XP completely.
> Would it be worthwhile?
See the above. It's probably more worthwhile to upgrade the RAM
(assuming that you don't have at least 2GB).
--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003
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