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setup dual boot?

 
 
Tim Scott Mathews
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      02-17-2007
I installed Vista Home Premium and chose upgrade to see how well it would
handle all my current programs and settings. I was quite pleased with that
aspect BUT, sadly, several of the programs I use a lot on a daily basis--PDA
related--haven't yet been upgraded so, totally converting to Vista at this
point isn't an option for me. I've reformatted, re-installed XP and
partitioned my hard drive with Windows XP on C. If I start the installation
of Vista from within XP, will I get an option to install to the newly
created "d" drive and run dual boot or is there some special procedure I
need to follow?

Thanks,
Tim


 
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\LG\
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      02-17-2007

"Tim Scott Mathews"

> If I start the installation
> of Vista from within XP, will I get an option to install to the newly
> created "d" drive and run dual boot.


Yes.
 
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Tim Scott Mathews
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      02-17-2007

""LG"" <> wrote in message
news:...
>
> "Tim Scott Mathews"
>> If I start the installation of Vista from within XP, will I get an
>> option to install to the newly created "d" drive and run dual boot.

>
> Yes.


Thanks to you for the answer and to MS for the application. ;-)


 
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tsm21
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      02-17-2007
It might be better if you start the Vista installation from the Vista DVD (ie
not from within XP) as this will allow which ever OS you are booting from to
run from the "c" drive (XP will be on "c" when it is running and Vista on "c"
when it is running - the physical drives stay the same, just the nominclature
the drives is changed to reflect the operating system being used. Doing it
this way means that the operating system that is booting is always going to
show up as "c" which is good for programs that need to start from the c
drive. This is the way I setup dual boot and it works like a charm.
--
Tom M


"Tim Scott Mathews" wrote:

>
> ""LG"" <> wrote in message
> news:...
> >
> > "Tim Scott Mathews"
> >> If I start the installation of Vista from within XP, will I get an
> >> option to install to the newly created "d" drive and run dual boot.

> >
> > Yes.

>
> Thanks to you for the answer and to MS for the application. ;-)
>
>
>

 
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Scott
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      02-18-2007
On Sat, 17 Feb 2007 08:30:21 -0800, tsm21
<> spake thusly:

>It might be better if you start the Vista installation from the Vista DVD (ie
>not from within XP) as this will allow which ever OS you are booting from to
>run from the "c" drive (XP will be on "c" when it is running and Vista on "c"
>when it is running - the physical drives stay the same, just the nominclature
>the drives is changed to reflect the operating system being used. Doing it
>this way means that the operating system that is booting is always going to
>show up as "c" which is good for programs that need to start from the c
>drive. This is the way I setup dual boot and it works like a charm.


Just don't expect system restore to work. :-)
--
Scott http://angrykeyboarder.com

A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
 
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Harry Sherman
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      02-18-2007
I understand that booting into XP will cause loss of Vista restore points;
however, according to MS a new system restore point will be
created on the next Vista boot. Is this not true?

"Scott" <> wrote in message
news:...
> On Sat, 17 Feb 2007 08:30:21 -0800, tsm21
> <> spake thusly:
>
>>It might be better if you start the Vista installation from the Vista DVD
>>(ie
>>not from within XP) as this will allow which ever OS you are booting from
>>to
>>run from the "c" drive (XP will be on "c" when it is running and Vista on
>>"c"
>>when it is running - the physical drives stay the same, just the
>>nominclature
>>the drives is changed to reflect the operating system being used. Doing
>>it
>>this way means that the operating system that is booting is always going
>>to
>>show up as "c" which is good for programs that need to start from the c
>>drive. This is the way I setup dual boot and it works like a charm.

>
> Just don't expect system restore to work. :-)
> --
> Scott http://angrykeyboarder.com
>
> A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
> Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?


 
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