On Wed, 27 Jun 2007 03:49:11 -0700, carrera d'olbani
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> On Jun 27, 12:34 am, "Ken Blake, MVP"
> <kbl...@this.is.am.invalid.domain> wrote:
>
> > Just boot from the Windows XP CD (change the BIOS boot order if
> > necessary to accomplish this) and follow the prompts for a clean
> > installation (delete the existing partition by pressing "D" when
> > prompted, then create a new one).
> >
> > You can find detailed instructions
> > or herehttp://xphelpandsupport.mvps.org/how_do_i_install_windows_xp.htm
>
> That's a good website, detailed one. It says the same what you say.
> However, I press F8 (or was it F10 ?) to assess the BIOS prompt, and
> the computer gives me a choice in Chinese !
Then you are apparently not at the BIOS setup screen. How to get into
your BIOS depends, not on Windows, but on what motherboard/BIOS you
have. As a matter of fact, you have to access the BIOS before Windows
even starts to boot. One common way is to press the Del key when you
first power on, but that's not necessarily right for your computer.
Watch the screen carefully when you first boot; there's often a
message there telling you what to do. If not, check your system
documentation or check with your vendor.
Also look here:
http://michaelstevenstech.com/bios_manufacturer.htm Or
just try the Del key. There's a good chance that's correct for you.
>
> I insert my WinXP installation disk, and it suggest to install. I
> agree, and a window with a crossed red circle pops up. The writing is
> in Chinese ! I tried permuations of the knobs, and sometimes I get the
> window's message that the "update is not possible because the windows
> is in different language" or something to that effect.
You are trying to do the installation from within Windows. As I
explained earlier, that is *not* what you should be doing. Set the
BIOS to boot from the CD first (not the hard drive) and boot from the
Windows XP CD.
When you do this correctly, there is no possible message from Windows
about a different language, because there is no Chinese Windows
involved at all.
--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User
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