Hi, Dan.
Are you SURE those are 6 DVDs? Do you know the difference between CD and
DVD? They look identical, but the labels clearly identify them as DVD or
CD. The difference is significant because a DVD holds about 6 times as much
information as a CD.
Vista is the first Windows version that is too big to fit onto a single CD,
so it normally comes on a single DVD. Except that Vista Ultimate comes with
2 DVDs (one has the 32-bit version and the other has the 64-bit version) and
a single product key that can be used to install either version. Versions
other than Ultimate come with a single DVD, either 32-bit or 64-bit, and the
buyer may request the other "bit" version.
Users who have a computer with a CD reader but no DVD reader can ask for the
alternative media. I've never done this but I understand that this Vista
media consists of several (6?) CD-ROMs.
Is this what you received?
Is your computer hardware 64-bit? Please tell us the exact make and model
of computer that you have. If you built your computer yourself, tell us the
make and model of motherboard and CPU. How much RAM in your computer? And
tell us about your hard drive(s) and optical (CD or DVD) drive(s). Perhaps
most important, exactly which version of Vista did you buy? Vista Home
Basic? Vista Ultimate? Or some other version?
Until we know all that, we're just shooting in the dark as to what advice to
give you.
RC
--
R. C. White, CPA
San Marcos, TX
(E-Mail Removed)
Microsoft Windows MVP
Windows Live Mail 2009 (14.0.8064.0206) in Win7 Ultimate x64 7000
"Dan (the newbie)" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
> Hi,
>
> I'm posting this question to relevant newsgroups, I hope you don't mind.
>
> I subscribed to the alternative media program and I do not yet what to
> make of the six DVD set that I received from Microsoft. I had hoped to
> order the 64-bit media but something got screwed up and they sent me
> 32-bit media and the DVDs were dated 2007. Was this a clearance sale? SP1
> was on a separate DVD. A more useful product would have SP1 incorporated
> into the install DVD. When I tried to run the install DVD from Vista, it
> told me that I could not do an upgrade because the version of Vista that I
> was running was more recent that the version on the DVD. I subscribe to
> Vista update loyally. I did not want to do a clean install and screw up
> months of work, especially when I really wanted 64-bit media. I had a look
> at the other four DVDs. They all contain folders labeled 'Sources' and one
> humungous SWM install file. My copy of Vista does not know what to do with
> these compressed SWM files and I cannot Google anything.
>
> Can someone please resolve my puzzlement? Did I receive anything of value
> from Microsoft? Do I have any entitlement to 64-bit media?
>
> Thanks.