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winnt directory or windows directory after upgrade
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Windows XP Setup
winnt directory or windows directory after upgrade
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winnt directory or windows directory after upgrade |
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#1 |
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Do I have this right? When upgrading from Windows 9x and ME to XP, the XP
system directory ends up being called Windows. But when upgrading from NT4 or W2K, the system directory ends up being called Winnt. And, if this is the case, can I somehow rename the system directory from Winnt to Windows? Thanks, |
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#2 |
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[[On a clean install, Setup creates a top-level folder called Windows. On
an upgrade, Setup uses the current path for %WinDir% - for Windows 98 or Windows Me, that’s typically C:\Windows; for Windows NT 4 and Windows 2000, the drive letter may vary, but the name of the system folder is usually \Winnt. ]] If you do an upgrade over Win 2000, which uses WINNT, then the installation will be in WINNT. If you have an OEM installed version (like on a Gateway) it may be in WINNT if they used the System Preparation Tool and never changed the setup from WINNT to WINDOWS. Or decided for whatever reason to use WINNT instead of WINDOWS. I know a good number of people who have bought Gateways with XP preinstalled in C:\WINNT. %windir% can be anything that the person doing the install, or scripting the install, chooses. When performing a clean install, you can specify a different folder name, but your safest choice is to use the default name. It makes no difference if the %windir% is WINNT or WINDOWS. Except that it can be confusing. Trying to change Winnt to Windows would be tougher than a $2 steak. There are probably 100s of registry settings that refer to Winnt. Leave it the way it is. Or reinstall and specify Windows when installing. -- Hope this helps. Let us know. Wes MS-MVP Windows Shell/User In news:rgusg.149863$IK3.26497@pd7tw1no, ComputerTeacher <computerteacher-nospame@takemail.com> hunted and pecked: > Do I have this right? When upgrading from Windows 9x and ME to XP, the XP > system directory ends up being called Windows. But when upgrading from > NT4 or W2K, the system directory ends up being called Winnt. > > And, if this is the case, can I somehow rename the system directory from > Winnt to Windows? > > Thanks, |
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#3 |
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Thanks Wes, your reply does help.
I read an article on the MS website regarding roaming profiles (which we use on our network). It suggested that many roaming profile problems can be solved if all workstations have the same versions of Windows and Office installed so that everything is stored the same way. And it wnet on to say we should also look at making the %WinDir% the same for that reason (translated - do clean installs or whatever it takes to get everyone on c:\windows) But it doesn't matter much anymore anyway. I've decided to toast roaming profiles. We can redirect the desktop and my document folders to the users' home directories and use scripts to maintain network printers. I think the only other thing we'll have to worry about is redirecting favorites, cookies and autoarchived pst files (in case some users have them on their c drives and reprogramming their Outlook profile to find the pst in its new location). But I'm sure I'll find fixes for that. Thanks again, Jeremy "Wesley Vogel" <123WVogel955@comcast.net> wrote in message news:OdsmtXIpGHA.4848@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl... > [[On a clean install, Setup creates a top-level folder called Windows. On > an upgrade, Setup uses the current path for %WinDir% - for Windows 98 or > Windows Me, that’s typically C:\Windows; for Windows NT 4 and Windows > 2000, > the drive letter may vary, but the name of the system folder is usually > \Winnt. ]] > > If you do an upgrade over Win 2000, which uses WINNT, then the > installation > will be in WINNT. > > If you have an OEM installed version (like on a Gateway) it may be in > WINNT > if they used the System Preparation Tool and never changed the setup from > WINNT to WINDOWS. Or decided for whatever reason to use WINNT instead of > WINDOWS. > > I know a good number of people who have bought Gateways with XP > preinstalled > in C:\WINNT. > > %windir% can be anything that the person doing the install, or scripting > the > install, chooses. > > When performing a clean install, you can specify a different folder name, > but your safest choice is to use the default name. > > It makes no difference if the %windir% is WINNT or WINDOWS. Except that > it > can be confusing. > > Trying to change Winnt to Windows would be tougher than a $2 steak. There > are probably 100s of registry settings that refer to Winnt. > > Leave it the way it is. Or reinstall and specify Windows when installing. > > -- > Hope this helps. Let us know. > > Wes > MS-MVP Windows Shell/User > > In news:rgusg.149863$IK3.26497@pd7tw1no, > ComputerTeacher <computerteacher-nospame@takemail.com> hunted and pecked: >> Do I have this right? When upgrading from Windows 9x and ME to XP, the >> XP >> system directory ends up being called Windows. But when upgrading from >> NT4 or W2K, the system directory ends up being called Winnt. >> >> And, if this is the case, can I somehow rename the system directory from >> Winnt to Windows? >> >> Thanks, > |
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