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Rick Rogers
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Hi,
1. Yes, but.... 2. No, the license died with the emachine. OEM licenses are not transferrable. To do (1) you'd need to purchase a new retail license. The emachine's version is likely also BIOS-locked and will not install on other hardware in any case. 3. Since (2) is no, you have this answer. You'd need to reinstall anyway due to the major hardware differences. -- 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 "Old Geezer" <Old (E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:A3386D30-EB62-496C-9C51-(E-Mail Removed)... > My three year old emachines had its motherboard burn up. Rather than try > to > have it fixed I replaced it with a HP a6200n running Vista. > > I removed the 350 GB EDI hard drive from my emachines and installed it in > the HP and the HP reads all the files - thank goodness. It tries to boot > on > that EDI drive, but at boot time I can direct it to the SATA drive and it > will boot and come up in Vista normally. > > I have a huge amount of work on that EDI drive and wish to continue using > some very fine XT software. > > My questions are: 1. Can I use the EDI drive, containing a stand-alone > XP > operating system, to boot the XP operating system without touching the > SATA > drive containing the Vista and select the operating system at boot time? > 2. > Can I legally use the XP disk that came with the emachines, since it is > now > dead, to load the operating system on the EDI drive? Finally, 3. If 2 > is > yes, is there too much difference between the emachines (Intel Celeron at > 2.6 > GHz) and my new AMD dual core HP PC for that disk to work or will I have > to > buy a new XP operating system? |
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John Barnes
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If you are able to boot to the IDE drive, you will delete the restore points
and shadow copies on your Vista system. You would need to hide the Vista drive from XP. Many times the OS is locked to the system installed on, so you would be unable to run it on another machine. I would expect that the upgrade to the new machine, even with the motherboard burn up exception, is in violation of the EULA, but it never hurts to go thru the activation process, talk to the operator and see what happens. I would expect that it would be denied. The CPU isn't as important as the other MOBO processes, specifically the north and south bridge and I would certainly expect problems there. With a new license and copy of XP, you may be able to do a repair install and have it work. Do you have a copy of XP, or just a restore disk? "Old Geezer" <Old (E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:A3386D30-EB62-496C-9C51-(E-Mail Removed)... > My three year old emachines had its motherboard burn up. Rather than try > to > have it fixed I replaced it with a HP a6200n running Vista. > > I removed the 350 GB EDI hard drive from my emachines and installed it in > the HP and the HP reads all the files - thank goodness. It tries to boot > on > that EDI drive, but at boot time I can direct it to the SATA drive and it > will boot and come up in Vista normally. > > I have a huge amount of work on that EDI drive and wish to continue using > some very fine XT software. > > My questions are: 1. Can I use the EDI drive, containing a stand-alone > XP > operating system, to boot the XP operating system without touching the > SATA > drive containing the Vista and select the operating system at boot time? > 2. > Can I legally use the XP disk that came with the emachines, since it is > now > dead, to load the operating system on the EDI drive? Finally, 3. If 2 > is > yes, is there too much difference between the emachines (Intel Celeron at > 2.6 > GHz) and my new AMD dual core HP PC for that disk to work or will I have > to > buy a new XP operating system? |
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=?Utf-8?B?T2xkIEdlZXplcg==?=
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Hi Rick.
Thanks very much for the information. I was afraid that I'd have to buy a new XP operating system, oh well. Seems a shame since my OEM disk is still in its plastic wrap. I should have mentioned that I am a genuine dinosaur and I know a whole lot more about assembly language programming for the 8080 and the Z80, but I'm pretty dumb when it comes to these operating systems. Actually, I'm real, real, real dumb. I should have written earlier that when I first power on the new HP system, it TRIES to boot off the IDE drive (which really puzzled me at first). Of course the boot is unsuccessful and then when it tries to reboot, I can press Esc and get into the setup and direct the sequence to the other (SATA) drive. After doing that, everything works great. What I'm hoping is, by having operating systems on two entirely different drives that only talk to each other after booting up, I can avoid wiping out and having to reload any parts of the other operating system (does that make any sense?). In other words, by having them stand-alone on two different disks, one won't know of the other's existence and won't interact - is that right? If I replace the emachines XP system and load a new XP system on the IDE drive, will it wipe out the hundreds of GB's of programs and data that are already there? And finally, can you suggest where can I buy an official XP disk that will work with my new HP's motherboard and hardware? Thanks again for your very helpful and rapid reply. I Really appreciate it. John PS Maybe it will grow on me, but so far I am somewhat less than thrilled (hooboy!) with the Vista OS and very disappointed that it is so incompatible with my XP programs and hardware. "Rick Rogers" wrote: > Hi, > > 1. Yes, but.... > 2. No, the license died with the emachine. OEM licenses are not > transferrable. To do (1) you'd need to purchase a new retail license. The > emachine's version is likely also BIOS-locked and will not install on other > hardware in any case. > 3. Since (2) is no, you have this answer. You'd need to reinstall anyway due > to the major hardware differences. > > -- > 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 > > "Old Geezer" <Old (E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message > news:A3386D30-EB62-496C-9C51-(E-Mail Removed)... > > My three year old emachines had its motherboard burn up. Rather than try > > to > > have it fixed I replaced it with a HP a6200n running Vista. > > > > I removed the 350 GB EDI hard drive from my emachines and installed it in > > the HP and the HP reads all the files - thank goodness. It tries to boot > > on > > that EDI drive, but at boot time I can direct it to the SATA drive and it > > will boot and come up in Vista normally. > > > > I have a huge amount of work on that EDI drive and wish to continue using > > some very fine XT software. > > > > My questions are: 1. Can I use the EDI drive, containing a stand-alone > > XP > > operating system, to boot the XP operating system without touching the > > SATA > > drive containing the Vista and select the operating system at boot time? > > 2. > > Can I legally use the XP disk that came with the emachines, since it is > > now > > dead, to load the operating system on the EDI drive? Finally, 3. If 2 > > is > > yes, is there too much difference between the emachines (Intel Celeron at > > 2.6 > > GHz) and my new AMD dual core HP PC for that disk to work or will I have > > to > > buy a new XP operating system? > > |
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=?Utf-8?B?T2xkIEdlZXplcg==?=
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Hi John:
Thanks very much for the reply. Right now I am not able to boot from the IDE drive because the XP OS on it was for the emachines and it crashes. By pressing Esc and then selecting the SATA drive, it boots up in Vista just fine. After getting into Vista, I can read all the data that is on the IDE drive - thank goodness!! By the way, it sure is strange to me that the BIOS naturally selects the IDE drive over the new SATA drive and you have to manually direct it at boot time. As I mentioned in the other post, I am hoping by having two seperate drives, I can have two seperate operating systems that do not interact with each other. In other words, when it boots in XP, it won't even know there is a Vista OS on the other drive and when I boot in Vista, it won't know there is an XP OS on the IDE drive. That make sense? Yes, I was afraid the emachines XP disk wouldn't work and now I'm thinking that I shouldn't even try as it would be a waste of time. In the previous post I asked Rick if he had any ideas where an official XP OS is available and I wonder if you had any suggestions too. By the way, I have both a restore and the entire OS disks. Both disks are in their original shrink wrap and never had to be used before the motherboard burned up. Gee, the motherboard burning up after three years of burn-in was the last thing I expected. As mentioned to Rick, I am a microcomputer dinosaur and I hope I am using the terminology correctly. Thanks, John "John Barnes" wrote: > If you are able to boot to the IDE drive, you will delete the restore points > and shadow copies on your Vista system. You would need to hide the Vista > drive from XP. Many times the OS is locked to the system installed on, so > you would be unable to run it on another machine. > I would expect that the upgrade to the new machine, even with the > motherboard burn up exception, is in violation of the EULA, but it never > hurts to go thru the activation process, talk to the operator and see what > happens. I would expect that it would be denied. > The CPU isn't as important as the other MOBO processes, specifically the > north and south bridge and I would certainly expect problems there. With a > new license and copy of XP, you may be able to do a repair install and have > it work. Do you have a copy of XP, or just a restore disk? > > > "Old Geezer" <Old (E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message > news:A3386D30-EB62-496C-9C51-(E-Mail Removed)... > > My three year old emachines had its motherboard burn up. Rather than try > > to > > have it fixed I replaced it with a HP a6200n running Vista. > > > > I removed the 350 GB EDI hard drive from my emachines and installed it in > > the HP and the HP reads all the files - thank goodness. It tries to boot > > on > > that EDI drive, but at boot time I can direct it to the SATA drive and it > > will boot and come up in Vista normally. > > > > I have a huge amount of work on that EDI drive and wish to continue using > > some very fine XT software. > > > > My questions are: 1. Can I use the EDI drive, containing a stand-alone > > XP > > operating system, to boot the XP operating system without touching the > > SATA > > drive containing the Vista and select the operating system at boot time? > > 2. > > Can I legally use the XP disk that came with the emachines, since it is > > now > > dead, to load the operating system on the EDI drive? Finally, 3. If 2 > > is > > yes, is there too much difference between the emachines (Intel Celeron at > > 2.6 > > GHz) and my new AMD dual core HP PC for that disk to work or will I have > > to > > buy a new XP operating system? > > |
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Rick Rogers
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Hi,
> I should have written earlier that when I first power on the new HP > system, > it TRIES to boot off the IDE drive (which really puzzled me at first). Of > course the boot is unsuccessful and then when it tries to reboot, I can > press > Esc and get into the setup and direct the sequence to the other (SATA) > drive. > After doing that, everything works great. You might want to see if you can change the drive boot order in the system BIOS to alleviate that. > What I'm hoping is, by having operating systems on two entirely different > drives that only talk to each other after booting up, I can avoid wiping > out > and having to reload any parts of the other operating system (does that > make > any sense?). In other words, by having them stand-alone on two different > disks, one won't know of the other's existence and won't interact - is > that > right? You can certainly have two different operating systems on two different drives, but in most cases they will "see" each other when loaded. In the case of Vista and XP there are some issues when this occurs. To completely hide them from each other requires the use of a third party boot manager that can determine which volumes available on the system are loaded with each operating system. My preference for this type of multi-boot system is BootIT NG from terabyte. > If I replace the emachines XP system and load a new XP system on the IDE > drive, will it wipe out the hundreds of GB's of programs and data that are > already there? Only if you choose to format it. You may be able to affect a repair of the existing installation with a retail disk. Otherwise, you will likely have to do a parallel installation where you will be able to regain access to data files, but not the originally installed programs. They would need to be reinstalled from their original installation media. > And finally, can you suggest where can I buy an official XP disk that will > work with my new HP's motherboard and hardware? Any retail disk should do, and you might actually want to contact HP to see if they offer a modified version of XP that has all the necessary drivers for the hardware on this system. If you get a retail disk, just make sure drivers are available for download from HP's support site, as not all the needed ones may be in the retail disk. -- 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 "Old Geezer" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:FE4B25A5-171C-450F-A8EA-(E-Mail Removed)... > Hi Rick. > > Thanks very much for the information. I was afraid that I'd have to buy a > new XP operating system, oh well. Seems a shame since my OEM disk is > still > in its plastic wrap. > > I should have mentioned that I am a genuine dinosaur and I know a whole > lot > more about assembly language programming for the 8080 and the Z80, but I'm > pretty dumb when it comes to these operating systems. Actually, I'm real, > real, real dumb. > > I should have written earlier that when I first power on the new HP > system, > it TRIES to boot off the IDE drive (which really puzzled me at first). Of > course the boot is unsuccessful and then when it tries to reboot, I can > press > Esc and get into the setup and direct the sequence to the other (SATA) > drive. > After doing that, everything works great. > > What I'm hoping is, by having operating systems on two entirely different > drives that only talk to each other after booting up, I can avoid wiping > out > and having to reload any parts of the other operating system (does that > make > any sense?). In other words, by having them stand-alone on two different > disks, one won't know of the other's existence and won't interact - is > that > right? > > If I replace the emachines XP system and load a new XP system on the IDE > drive, will it wipe out the hundreds of GB's of programs and data that are > already there? > > And finally, can you suggest where can I buy an official XP disk that will > work with my new HP's motherboard and hardware? > > Thanks again for your very helpful and rapid reply. I Really appreciate > it. > > > John > > PS Maybe it will grow on me, but so far I am somewhat less than thrilled > (hooboy!) with the Vista OS and very disappointed that it is so > incompatible > with my XP programs and hardware. > > > "Rick Rogers" wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> 1. Yes, but.... >> 2. No, the license died with the emachine. OEM licenses are not >> transferrable. To do (1) you'd need to purchase a new retail license. The >> emachine's version is likely also BIOS-locked and will not install on >> other >> hardware in any case. >> 3. Since (2) is no, you have this answer. You'd need to reinstall anyway >> due >> to the major hardware differences. >> >> -- >> 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 >> >> "Old Geezer" <Old (E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message >> news:A3386D30-EB62-496C-9C51-(E-Mail Removed)... >> > My three year old emachines had its motherboard burn up. Rather than >> > try >> > to >> > have it fixed I replaced it with a HP a6200n running Vista. >> > >> > I removed the 350 GB EDI hard drive from my emachines and installed it >> > in >> > the HP and the HP reads all the files - thank goodness. It tries to >> > boot >> > on >> > that EDI drive, but at boot time I can direct it to the SATA drive and >> > it >> > will boot and come up in Vista normally. >> > >> > I have a huge amount of work on that EDI drive and wish to continue >> > using >> > some very fine XT software. >> > >> > My questions are: 1. Can I use the EDI drive, containing a >> > stand-alone >> > XP >> > operating system, to boot the XP operating system without touching the >> > SATA >> > drive containing the Vista and select the operating system at boot >> > time? >> > 2. >> > Can I legally use the XP disk that came with the emachines, since it is >> > now >> > dead, to load the operating system on the EDI drive? Finally, 3. If >> > 2 >> > is >> > yes, is there too much difference between the emachines (Intel Celeron >> > at >> > 2.6 >> > GHz) and my new AMD dual core HP PC for that disk to work or will I >> > have >> > to >> > buy a new XP operating system? >> >> |
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John Barnes
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As Rick pointed out, your BIOS will have a boot priority section where you
can change the order of HD priorities. There are two places in most BIOS's, one for type priority (i.e. CD HD Floppy etc.) and another where you prioritise the various HD's. As to having two drives, it makes NO difference as to whether the restore points and shadow copies are deleted when booting to XP. The drive must be hidden or encrypted to avoid the problem. Depends on what country you live in as to where to buy. The following are recommended by MVP Charlie Russel I have used the middle three with no problems. NCIX.com (US and Canada) Directron.com (US) NewEgg.com ZipZoomFly.com planetamd64.com "Old Geezer" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:8C9A0192-A519-4EEB-B8E2-(E-Mail Removed)... > Hi John: > > Thanks very much for the reply. > > Right now I am not able to boot from the IDE drive because the XP OS on it > was for the emachines and it crashes. By pressing Esc and then selecting > the > SATA drive, it boots up in Vista just fine. After getting into Vista, I > can > read all the data that is on the IDE drive - thank goodness!! By the way, > it > sure is strange to me that the BIOS naturally selects the IDE drive over > the > new SATA drive and you have to manually direct it at boot time. > > As I mentioned in the other post, I am hoping by having two seperate > drives, > I can have two seperate operating systems that do not interact with each > other. In other words, when it boots in XP, it won't even know there is a > Vista OS on the other drive and when I boot in Vista, it won't know there > is > an XP OS on the IDE drive. That make sense? > > Yes, I was afraid the emachines XP disk wouldn't work and now I'm thinking > that I shouldn't even try as it would be a waste of time. In the previous > post I asked Rick if he had any ideas where an official XP OS is available > and I wonder if you had any suggestions too. By the way, I have both a > restore and the entire OS disks. Both disks are in their original shrink > wrap and never had to be used before the motherboard burned up. Gee, the > motherboard burning up after three years of burn-in was the last thing I > expected. > > As mentioned to Rick, I am a microcomputer dinosaur and I hope I am using > the terminology correctly. > > Thanks, > > > > John > > > "John Barnes" wrote: > >> If you are able to boot to the IDE drive, you will delete the restore >> points >> and shadow copies on your Vista system. You would need to hide the Vista >> drive from XP. Many times the OS is locked to the system installed on, >> so >> you would be unable to run it on another machine. >> I would expect that the upgrade to the new machine, even with the >> motherboard burn up exception, is in violation of the EULA, but it never >> hurts to go thru the activation process, talk to the operator and see >> what >> happens. I would expect that it would be denied. >> The CPU isn't as important as the other MOBO processes, specifically the >> north and south bridge and I would certainly expect problems there. With >> a >> new license and copy of XP, you may be able to do a repair install and >> have >> it work. Do you have a copy of XP, or just a restore disk? >> >> >> "Old Geezer" <Old (E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message >> news:A3386D30-EB62-496C-9C51-(E-Mail Removed)... >> > My three year old emachines had its motherboard burn up. Rather than >> > try >> > to >> > have it fixed I replaced it with a HP a6200n running Vista. >> > >> > I removed the 350 GB EDI hard drive from my emachines and installed it >> > in >> > the HP and the HP reads all the files - thank goodness. It tries to >> > boot >> > on >> > that EDI drive, but at boot time I can direct it to the SATA drive and >> > it >> > will boot and come up in Vista normally. >> > >> > I have a huge amount of work on that EDI drive and wish to continue >> > using >> > some very fine XT software. >> > >> > My questions are: 1. Can I use the EDI drive, containing a >> > stand-alone >> > XP >> > operating system, to boot the XP operating system without touching the >> > SATA >> > drive containing the Vista and select the operating system at boot >> > time? >> > 2. >> > Can I legally use the XP disk that came with the emachines, since it is >> > now >> > dead, to load the operating system on the EDI drive? Finally, 3. If >> > 2 >> > is >> > yes, is there too much difference between the emachines (Intel Celeron >> > at >> > 2.6 >> > GHz) and my new AMD dual core HP PC for that disk to work or will I >> > have >> > to >> > buy a new XP operating system? >> >> |
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Paul Randall
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Hi
These newfangled computers are different from the ones we got in the old days. If you go to http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/s...&lang=en&cc=us, you will see that HP only supports Vista on your computer model. That means that you might be able to find drivers elsewhere that might allow WXP to install and run, or maybe not. On my Compaq-Vista system, I was told that the BIOS was optimized for Vista and WXP would not run properly. If your current software and data are very important to you, perhaps you should look into buying a used computer that might be compatible with the WXP installed on your big hard drive. You might also consider using Norton Ghost or Acronis True Image to clone your 350 GB hard drive to another drive so that you can recover from things getting messed up during installation and testing. -Paul Randall "Old Geezer" <Old (E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:A3386D30-EB62-496C-9C51-(E-Mail Removed)... > My three year old emachines had its motherboard burn up. Rather than try > to > have it fixed I replaced it with a HP a6200n running Vista. > > I removed the 350 GB EDI hard drive from my emachines and installed it in > the HP and the HP reads all the files - thank goodness. It tries to boot > on > that EDI drive, but at boot time I can direct it to the SATA drive and it > will boot and come up in Vista normally. > > I have a huge amount of work on that EDI drive and wish to continue using > some very fine XT software. > > My questions are: 1. Can I use the EDI drive, containing a stand-alone > XP > operating system, to boot the XP operating system without touching the > SATA > drive containing the Vista and select the operating system at boot time? > 2. > Can I legally use the XP disk that came with the emachines, since it is > now > dead, to load the operating system on the EDI drive? Finally, 3. If 2 > is > yes, is there too much difference between the emachines (Intel Celeron at > 2.6 > GHz) and my new AMD dual core HP PC for that disk to work or will I have > to > buy a new XP operating system? |
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=?Utf-8?B?T2xkIEdlZXplcg==?=
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Hi Rick: Thanks again for the very helpful information. I was afraid the two OS' would interact, but I will look into the BootIT NG you mentioned and I'll give HP a call and see if they have an OEM XP system they will sell me (hopefully reasonably). I'm thinking now it might be easier to just buy a motherboard, a new XP OS and get my old emachines working again. I don't really know what I'm doing, Vista seems so hard to manage and I am soooo afraid I'll wipe something out that will render my new PC useless. I have searched all over the place, but I can't see how to modify the boot sequence. The old IDE drive is drive 0 and that's the one it tries to boot off of. Nothing in the BIOS I've seen allows me to rearrange the sequence, but maybe I'm looking in the wrong places. I guess before I do anything I should make up and burn those OS disks for Vista and somehow backup all those GB's of data from the old IDE disk. Thanks again for all the help. John "Rick Rogers" wrote: > Hi, > > > I should have written earlier that when I first power on the new HP > > system, > > it TRIES to boot off the IDE drive (which really puzzled me at first). Of > > course the boot is unsuccessful and then when it tries to reboot, I can > > press > > Esc and get into the setup and direct the sequence to the other (SATA) > > drive. > > After doing that, everything works great. > > You might want to see if you can change the drive boot order in the system > BIOS to alleviate that. > > > What I'm hoping is, by having operating systems on two entirely different > > drives that only talk to each other after booting up, I can avoid wiping > > out > > and having to reload any parts of the other operating system (does that > > make > > any sense?). In other words, by having them stand-alone on two different > > disks, one won't know of the other's existence and won't interact - is > > that > > right? > > You can certainly have two different operating systems on two different > drives, but in most cases they will "see" each other when loaded. In the > case of Vista and XP there are some issues when this occurs. To completely > hide them from each other requires the use of a third party boot manager > that can determine which volumes available on the system are loaded with > each operating system. My preference for this type of multi-boot system is > BootIT NG from terabyte. > > > If I replace the emachines XP system and load a new XP system on the IDE > > drive, will it wipe out the hundreds of GB's of programs and data that are > > already there? > > Only if you choose to format it. You may be able to affect a repair of the > existing installation with a retail disk. Otherwise, you will likely have to > do a parallel installation where you will be able to regain access to data > files, but not the originally installed programs. They would need to be > reinstalled from their original installation media. > > > And finally, can you suggest where can I buy an official XP disk that will > > work with my new HP's motherboard and hardware? > > Any retail disk should do, and you might actually want to contact HP to see > if they offer a modified version of XP that has all the necessary drivers > for the hardware on this system. If you get a retail disk, just make sure > drivers are available for download from HP's support site, as not all the > needed ones may be in the retail disk. > > -- > 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 > > "Old Geezer" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message > news:FE4B25A5-171C-450F-A8EA-(E-Mail Removed)... > > Hi Rick. > > > > Thanks very much for the information. I was afraid that I'd have to buy a > > new XP operating system, oh well. Seems a shame since my OEM disk is > > still > > in its plastic wrap. > > > > I should have mentioned that I am a genuine dinosaur and I know a whole > > lot > > more about assembly language programming for the 8080 and the Z80, but I'm > > pretty dumb when it comes to these operating systems. Actually, I'm real, > > real, real dumb. > > > > I should have written earlier that when I first power on the new HP > > system, > > it TRIES to boot off the IDE drive (which really puzzled me at first). Of > > course the boot is unsuccessful and then when it tries to reboot, I can > > press > > Esc and get into the setup and direct the sequence to the other (SATA) > > drive. > > After doing that, everything works great. > > > > What I'm hoping is, by having operating systems on two entirely different > > drives that only talk to each other after booting up, I can avoid wiping > > out > > and having to reload any parts of the other operating system (does that > > make > > any sense?). In other words, by having them stand-alone on two different > > disks, one won't know of the other's existence and won't interact - is > > that > > right? > > > > If I replace the emachines XP system and load a new XP system on the IDE > > drive, will it wipe out the hundreds of GB's of programs and data that are > > already there? > > > > And finally, can you suggest where can I buy an official XP disk that will > > work with my new HP's motherboard and hardware? > > > > Thanks again for your very helpful and rapid reply. I Really appreciate > > it. > > > > > > John > > > > PS Maybe it will grow on me, but so far I am somewhat less than thrilled > > (hooboy!) with the Vista OS and very disappointed that it is so > > incompatible > > with my XP programs and hardware. > > > > > > "Rick Rogers" wrote: > > > >> Hi, > >> > >> 1. Yes, but.... > >> 2. No, the license died with the emachine. OEM licenses are not > >> transferrable. To do (1) you'd need to purchase a new retail license. The > >> emachine's version is likely also BIOS-locked and will not install on > >> other > >> hardware in any case. > >> 3. Since (2) is no, you have this answer. You'd need to reinstall anyway > >> due > >> to the major hardware differences. > >> > >> -- > >> 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 > >> > >> "Old Geezer" <Old (E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message > >> news:A3386D30-EB62-496C-9C51-(E-Mail Removed)... > >> > My three year old emachines had its motherboard burn up. Rather than > >> > try > >> > to > >> > have it fixed I replaced it with a HP a6200n running Vista. > >> > > >> > I removed the 350 GB EDI hard drive from my emachines and installed it > >> > in > >> > the HP and the HP reads all the files - thank goodness. It tries to > >> > boot > >> > on > >> > that EDI drive, but at boot time I can direct it to the SATA drive and > >> > it > >> > will boot and come up in Vista normally. > >> > > >> > I have a huge amount of work on that EDI drive and wish to continue > >> > using > >> > some very fine XT software. > >> > > >> > My questions are: 1. Can I use the EDI drive, containing a > >> > stand-alone > >> > XP > >> > operating system, to boot the XP operating system without touching the > >> > SATA > >> > drive containing the Vista and select the operating system at boot > >> > time? > >> > 2. > >> > Can I legally use the XP disk that came with the emachines, since it is > >> > now > >> > dead, to load the operating system on the EDI drive? Finally, 3. If > >> > 2 > >> > is > >> > yes, is there too much difference between the emachines (Intel Celeron > >> > at > >> > 2.6 > >> > GHz) and my new AMD dual core HP PC for that disk to work or will I > >> > have > >> > to > >> > buy a new XP operating system? > >> > >> > > |
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