Is it worth up grading from Vista to windows 7? If so what cost and can I do
it without causing problems? how do I do it?
My recommendation for how to do it is simple â reformat and reinstall â and
Iâll explain why I always recommend that.
Whether you should upgrade isnât quite so simple, and falls into the âit
dependsâ bucket.
Overall Iâm pretty happy with Windows 7, and based on the rate of questions
and problems Iâm hearing about, itâs doing fairly well for other people as
well.
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Iâm a strong believer in âif it ainât broke, donât fix itâ.
What that means in this context is simply this: if your computer is working, working well, and youâre doing what you need to get done with it, why take any additional risks at all? I donât care if youâre running Windows 98, XP or Vista â if itâs working for you (and of course that includes being safe and secure), then I would not upgrade.
Similarly, if your hardware isnât up to the minimum required by Windows 7 (perhaps even better than the minimum) then of course itâs not really an option and I donât recommend trying to upgrade. If, for some reason, you find you do need to reinstall your OS, then reinstalling the one you already have is typically the best choice.
If you dislike Vista because of user interface changes, Windows 7 is not likely to help; itâs much more like Vista than XP. If thatâs a serious issue for you, then you might consider actually downgrading to XP, for as long as thatâs available. (Though, of course, my real recommendation is to learn to accept the new interface, since presumably at some point Windows XP will no longer be an option for any number of reasons.)
If you have âolder peripheralsâ â things like printers that have been around for a few years, youâll want to ensure that theyâre actually supported by Windows 7 before deciding if itâs right for you.
At the other end of the spectrum, if youâre getting a new machine and want Windows, then by all means get Windows 7 preinstalled. Thatâs a particularly easy recommendation since pre-installed OSâs bypass a number of the issues people might run into with an upgrade. (Though donât forget to insist on installation media.)
So, what if you have a machine thatâs beefy enough for Windows 7 (if youâre running Windows Vista, thatâs likely a given), your peripherals are supported, and donât mind or perhaps even prefer the Windows 7 UI?
If youâre willing to shell out the cost of the upgrade (which will vary based on the edition you want and your location â check local retailers or online), I would consider the upgrade if:
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youâre about to reformat/reinstall your machine for some other reason â like resolving a software issue, or just periodic âcleaning stuff upâ. A reformat/reinstall is, as weâll see shortly, my preferred upgrade approach. Since itâs a bit of work, itâs worth considering if thatâs what youâre about to do anyway.
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Windows 7 has something you want that Vista does not. Maybe its Home Groups, maybe itâs Media center, maybe itâs something else that was introduced or improved in Windows 7.
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you just want to. Perhaps you some other specific reason, perhaps you just want the latest and greatest. The important point here is that as long as your machine meets the requirements Iâm not going to wave you off and say you shouldnât.
As Iâve alluded to above, I feel strongly that the safest approach is a reformat/reinstall â or rather:
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Backup your computer
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Reformat your hard disk (as part of the Windows 7 setup process)
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Install Windows 7 from scratch
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Reinstall your other applications.
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Restore your data
As you can see thatâs a bit of work. But in my experience, itâs the safest approach, and has the highest probability of resulting in a working machine with all the unnecessary stuff that accumulated prior removed.
There are two additional alternatives:
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Tools like LapLinkâs PC Mover, (with which Iâve had no direct experience). For a fee they will âmoveâ your installed programs and data from your prior version of Windows to your new Windows 7 installation. I believe that by doing so, you elect not to take on the âcleaning out stuff you donât needâ portion that I find so valuable in a reformat/reinstall.
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Run an upgrade installation, if itâs even available. If you are running Windows XP, this isnât an option, but if youâre running appropriate versions of Windows Vista you can have the Windows 7 installed upgrade in place, preserving all the installed applications, data and settings. In my experience, if thereâs going to be a problem with an upgrade, this is where it occurs.
The bottom line is that Windows 7 is a fine operating system, and Iâm quite happy with it. I have no hesitations recommending it, with the caveats above.
I did the upgrade with the upgrade disk with no problems what so ever and all has been good since i did. And that was when windows 7 upgrade first came out.
I moved from XP straight to Windows 7 ultimate. I had the RC installed and my win7 ultimate upgrade (i got it cheap cos Iâm in school, again) installed without a flaw. I did choose to reformat my harddrive and that worked well.
I never really worked with Vista, but I can tell you Iâm very happy I moved to 7.
Itâs much more âfunâ to use than XP, even though XP was my faithful companion for many years.
It seems they took a good look at OS X when they designed the UI though ;-)
Oh well, it has happened before and it will happen again, so say we all, right ?
> I donât care if youâre running Windows 98, XP or Vista â if itâs working for you (and of course that includes being safe and secure), then I would not upgrade.
Misleading: It is not possible to be running Windows 98 (and be connected to the internet) and still be safe and secure. 98 has been end-of-lifeâd, and no longer gets security updates. And no, neither firewalls nor AV software are designed to inure you against unpatched holes in the OS.
28-Feb-2010
I recently upgraded a new Vista computer with the free W7 upgrade from HP for recent computers. First I did a clean install, and the machine would not connect to the net (either through hard wired or wireless). I then restored Vista and did an upgrade to W7. The machine still would not resolve my network ip address, which worked perfectly in Vista. After 30+ emails with HP, I have learned to manually do an ipconfig release-renew in command prompt every time I boot the computer, which temporarily fixes the problem. I have not decided whether to re-install Vista or live with the inconvenience. HP could not find an incompatibility in hardwear or drivers, and finally just said âsorry, youâre on your own, good luckâ.
PS: thanks for the great work, I really enjoy and have learned from it.
To a certain degree, Windows7 is an appliance like XP â made for people who do not want to learn a lot. Vista is different â it challenges your intellect. And that is the fun part of it. There are, however, a few features in Win7 that make it nice, namely Libraries, the Taskbar, Homegroup and Trim support. But a few useful Vista features were dropped.
I lost my XP system and got stuck with Windows 7. on the new PC.
I HATE IT! 90% of my older utilities wonât work. Some of my hardware require drivers that are NOT being made available! The security protection is making this a VERY UNPERSONAL Computer.
But you *can* reduce the paranoia-security, and you can eventually find new utilites â and you can expend lots of money replacing hardware or apps that no longer work.. To get what? Nothing Iâve found yet that wasnât in XP to begin with.
Like Leo says: If it aint broke donât screw with it! And Windows 7 will do it to you..
I bought a efurb emachine-and added a 500Gb-HD,
4gb of memory, and still my browsers freeze up
with win 7.
I tryed every hack i could find to no avail.
Today i reformatted and itâs still slow.
It has an AMD athlon 2650e processor.
Nvidia onboard Gforce 6150SE nForce 430.
Any ideaâs on how to fix this issue would be
greatly appreciated.
Unfortunately, not everyone can run out and buy a new computer every time Microsoft decides to jam a new operating system down our throats. Iâm one of them.
I do have a WinXP system (p3 â 600mhz). Iâm the âgeek next doorâ that fixes and repairs everybody elseâs systems and they are bringing me these state of the art systemâs with all the updaterâs running, systems that would pass all of the âexpertâs standardsâ for safe computing practices.
They have all the Windows Updateâs, Antivirus Updated, Windows Defender updated. Scanners running left and right and yet they are still getting infected.
My Analysis: to many âcomputer dummiesâ who rely 100% on programs that are not 100% reliable. People who donât take the time out to learn anything about their system other than turning it on and off. getting into their programs and getting out.
I just recently did a stupid thing and clicked on a wrong link on a web site. And watched as a virus tried to embed itself on my system.
âWinpatrolâ kept warning me that a new item was trying to start up, I kept denying it but it kept popping up. So I went online found out what I needed to get rid of it and problem solvedâŠ.but not a peep from my anti-virus program.
http://hitanykey.webs.com/
My old PC dies and I bought a new one that had Windows 7 and I love it. I guess this is a minority view here? But I find it superb. I havenât found any of my old programs that wonât run if set to use compatibility mode. In general Windows 7 is much more helpful in case of problems â which have been very few. I love the GUI with the transparent window frames. That feature greatly increases the visibility when you have a log of windows up. And many other cool things like âPin to task barâ.
28-Apr-2010
When I bought my new laptop with vista home premium HP mailed me a windows 7 disk. Iâve been afraid to install it. My motto is âif it ainât broke donât fix itâ. Everything currently is working well so I shouldnât have a problem upgrading to 7,,,,,right????
My wife bought a new laptop for the business, win vista home premium pre-installed. Itâs been hell to try and match it to the lan as all others run XP. It drops URLâs, reconfigures itself and whatâs most annoying, it does so called intelligent upgrades, repairs, reconfigurations without TELLING you what itâs doing â all you see is massive processor activity. Menus within menus is a pain in the posterior â it takes twice as long just to navigate to a file in a directory. I have no intention of going anywhere near it. XP is a dream to use, configure and best of all, REPAIR if something goes wrong.
I am a computer support guru and have tried Windows 7 clean installed and the upgrade from Windows XP using Laplink. which works pretty well.
I have also tried Windows 7 in XP mode which is like running XP.
At the end of the trials I did not like Windows 7 and I agree with Leo that if you have a good machine running with XP stay Like that. Donât get involved in the steep learning curve to use Windows & until you buy a new machine and have endure the pain of learning a new system any way.
Seriously how can any one not like W7. so your contemplating an upgrade are you? you really must in my opinion the 7 in comparison to XP is immense,but only in a good way.Ok 7 is a massive program yet the developers have made the system so intuitive that you will fly through it and learn it features.Some features you will never use or perhaps not find like stress tests and such like,donât let that comment put you off though.Iâm certainly no expert but i find the system REALLY good , after learning the basics of I.T on a X.P 32 bit all i can say is the upgrade to 64bit 7 was the best move i could of made and i would recommend it to any one.Yes there are certain open source O/S that you can acquire however downloading an uncorrupted version for me was akin to finding water in the Sahara.So for me W7 all the way,also if you are confident enough you could get the Beta of windows 8.