Hi,
Yes, it is. You'll need to carve out space on the drive for the second
installation, and you'll need an additional license for Vista. To carve out
space, run diskmgmt.msc and shrink the existing volume. At a minimum I'd
suggest you allow 20-25GB for the x64 install. If disk manager cannot carve
out that much, you'll need to use a third party tool like Acronis Disk
Manager or BootIT NG (disk manager may run into unmoveable files and cannot
shrink a volume beyond that, the other programs can).
Once space has been created, boot with the x64 disk and begin setup. You can
create the new partition and format it as part of setup. Select it and
installation should be pretty straight forward from there. Setup will create
the dual boot menu as part of the installation.
--
Best of Luck,
Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
Windows help -
www.rickrogers.org
My thoughts
http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
"pbl" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:7CB42096-6A7E-4D76-8D6F-(E-Mail Removed)...
>I have a hi-spec notebook with 32-bit Vista Ultimate installed and recently
>discovered that my notebook is capable of running 64-bit Vista. Is it
>possible to setup a dual boot? I have some essential software that is not
>64-bit compatible.