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I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
So, the OS is officially released now. Ars Technica has a mildly useful article on the whole thing.
Windows 7 is here - Ars Technica And for those of you who aren't sure if the OS will install fine, there's also a "compatibility center" for addressing that: http://www.microsoft.com/windows/com...s/default.aspx Not sure how useful it would end up being for you guys, but there you go. I went ahead and got the Student version for 30 bucks so I just have to backup my files in a bit and do a clean install (You can't do an upgrade from the RTM/RC versions of Win7 to the retail apparently, go figure). I was speaking idiomatically. |
I installed Win7 on a different partition than my WinXP install, yet I'm not given a boot selection screen when I start my PC up. Can't find how to add it in msconfig like I would in XP, can anyone clue me into it?
What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? |
Banned |
I have the x64 version installed and everything works fine. The only program that has some problems is Maya...
FELIPE NO |
RR, I'd recommend going to a windows 7 forum of sorts to figure out how to dual boot win 7 and xp. By default win 7 will take over boot from what I hear.
What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? |
This isn't that helpful, but I have XP and 7 on different partitions and I get the OS selection screen every time I boot up.
Jam it back in, in the dark. |
An additional note for anyone who got the 30 dollar version via a university email address. The OS will download into a single file, and after unzipping that file, you won't have a tidy clean ISO to turn to a disc. There's a method to get around that annoyance and have it DVD ready
How to make a DVD of that student-only Windows 7 you bought for $29.99 For Windows 7 users (RTM/RC/Etc.,) a small change in the command line instruction might be needed. How to make a DVD of that student-only Windows 7 you bought for $29.99
Windows 7 student upgrade hell - Apple 2.0 - Fortune Brainstorm Tech Anyway, I tried the alternative command line and it worked fine for me. If you need any assistance, give me a PM. There's nowhere I can't reach. |
Mine extracted right into an .iso that I downloaded from my school. =\
This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
I made up a neat little iso but I can't seem to burn it to jack shit, so I guess my DVD-RW drive is just getting old or whatever. Can't tell if it's the iso that's corrupt or my burner.
Also, apparently the Windows 7 Upgrade is a bit of marketing hype. The version sold to students at $30 is a full version of Windows 7. Additional Spam: I dunno if that solution is only supposed to work for Vista or SP3, because I'm still using XP SP2. I contacted Digital River to see about getting an actual disc which will of course take forever.
I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body?
Last edited by Bradylama; Oct 28, 2009 at 10:04 AM.
Reason: This member got a little too post happy.
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I have two questions and a request, regarding the student deal of $29.99!
1. The version on offer appears to be Windows 7 Home Premium. I'm currently on XP Professional. Will I miss anything? 2. Will there be ... difficulties (say, with activation and stuff) if I were to ask one of you guys to buy this for me? The promotion site says this is non-transferable, and it says Microsoft may demand full retail price if it discovers you aren't a current student, so... And the request. Assuming the answer to both questions are "No", can I rent the use a US-based .EDU e-mail address? I was speaking idiomatically. |
Welp, tried burning some simple data to a DVD-R and my whole system froze up. Good jorb, PIONEER.
Suppose I'll have to use the bootable flash drive method and have a friend burn it onto a cd for me. What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? |
Also, to the first question, Win7 Professional is also available at the same price. Of course being the assholes that they are, they've obscured the link in the purchase page for the Professional version. I think there are a great deal of features that you will miss if you get the Home edition, and while Win7 Pro is still mildly crippled, its not nearly as bad as Home, which would likely be hell for someone like you. See: Windows 7 editions - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia FELIPE NO |
I have a valid .edu.SG but no .edu address, unfortunately.
What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? |
Hahaha so the 4 gig flash drive I bought doesn't have enough space and I had to clear out its partitions to fit the ISO, so now there's a functioning ISO on the drive but I can't boot from it. This after going through DVD-Rs like toilet paper before realizing my DVD-RW is bad. I've spent about 20 bucks so far just trying to get this fucking thing to work.
Just have to call in some favors, I guess. Jam it back in, in the dark. |
Brady, were you burning the 64 bit version from a 32-bit operating system?
That has been known to cause some serious issues. There's nowhere I can't reach. |
Brady, you know you don't just drop the .iso on the USB drive, right? You need to do some sort of install thing onto your current HD and then move the files over.
This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
Uh, how would I have an ISO if I didn't compile it myself from the Digital River files motherfucker!?
Additional Spam: Just because I never used my DVD-RW to burn any DVDs until the day I needed it most and it had already given up the ghost long ago doesn't mean I don't know a thing or two about mounting isos. Gimme a lil credit, fellas. Additional Spam: Everything I've done has already been tested and proven by people who know way more about this stuff than I do, I just can't for the life of me get these goddamn files into a format I can boot from. I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body?
Last edited by Bradylama; Oct 28, 2009 at 02:45 PM.
Reason: This member got a little too post happy.
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So I finally get the iso onto a dvd, try to boot from it and get the message
Additional Spam: I booted from my Windows XP cd just fine. I was speaking idiomatically.
Last edited by Bradylama; Oct 29, 2009 at 06:03 PM.
Reason: This member got a little too post happy.
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i'm debating getting win7, but there are a couple of things i want to know first -
1. does it run faster, slower, or about the same speed as Vista? 2. does it have a lot of bugs? i can't really afford to have my laptop crashing all the time because i need it for school. What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? |
I don't have much experience with Vista, but as far as I know, it runs faster. It doesn't have as much crap to bog down the system. And, you can actually get away with running 7 on a lesser system.
As far as bugs go, I've not run into any--but again, that's just with my setup, which is a fairly well-to-do desktop. To sum it up, "It's what Vista should have been" FELIPE NO |
Lover of Noire |
Been running W7 x64 since beta. Love it. I liked Vista, but Windows 7 is truly the successor of XP. I bought the 3 license OEM Windows 7 Ultimate x64 for the two rigs I built at home, and into my laptop. Works great! Have not had to run WinXP mode yet...
My score is 7.7 in the system ranks. How ya doing, buddy?
The Happy Demon is me!
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I went from XP to 7 and am loving it. I tried vista but was having too many issues so I reverted to XP.
Jam it back in, in the dark. |
2. I've only bluescreened once on Windows 7 so far, and I haven't been able to reproduce it, so I'm taking it as a bizarre happenstance. 7 as a whole is remarkably stable, and this is on a laptop that is either on or on standby 90% of the week and I usually only reboot for Windows Update. The only thing I've run into so far is just minor incompatibility issues with very specific programs. Every time I log in, my university's system insists that I am not running a secure OS because it's not XP SP3 or Vista SP1, and there was one game whose name escapes me right now (some free to download shooter) that doesn't seem to do anything other than go to a black screen. Pretty much everything that works on Vista works on 7. One quick thing; for anti-virus on Windows 7, I recommend Microsoft Security Essentials. Believe it or not, it's free, it's lightweight, and it's incredibly uninvasive. In the months I've been using it, I've never had it bitch about a program and block it. It sits there using 3MB of RAM, which is basically nothing, and scans don't hog my entire computer the way AVG used to. The only downside to it, really, is that unlike other antivirus suites there isn't much in the way of customization. I don't particularly mind it, because I know unless I let someone else on my laptop the odds of me actually coming across a virus are next to nil, so all I need is something sitting there to call me an idiot if I click on something I shouldn't. Wow, that was a long ramble. Sorry about that. tl;dr: 7 is stable, fast, well-made. Microsoft Security Essentials is the best anti-virus for it. There's nowhere I can't reach. |
I've also noticed that it seems to run a defrag process in the background at all times. After using Win7 for a while and cleaning out a shit ton of files from one of my HDs, I checked with defrag how my drives looked and all of them were at 0% fragmentation!
(Or it could just be Win 7's defrag utility isn't telling me the right thing.) There are a few things they changed that I'm a little annoyed about. One of the features I miss the most and I can't seem to find is in the status bar for folders on XP it would give you how many objects were in the folder, how much space the files in the folder are taking up, and where the files are located. Now it only seems to give info like dimensions and filetype when I click on it, no size info. This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
Well, if you don't have anything in a folder selected, it tells you how much is in the folder you're viewing. How ya doing, buddy? |
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