How to uninstall XP home

  • Thread starter Thread starter Mike
  • Start date Start date
M

Mike

I need help unistalling XP home. I wish use 2000 pro as
the OS. The add/remove deosn't list WIN XP as an item to
remove. If I insert the WIN 2000 disk, XP disables the
setup because it is an older version of windows.

Thanks for any assistance
 
Why do you need to? XP is just the newer version of win2k. They are
essentially the same.
But if you must:
Boot to a win9x floppy boot disk, run Fdisk, delete partitions, create new
partitions, reboot to boot disk again, run format, (or reboot to xp cd,
format, install xp). Get boot disk here: www.bootdisk.com
 
In
Mike said:
I need help unistalling XP home. I wish use 2000 pro as
the OS. The add/remove deosn't list WIN XP as an item to
remove. If I insert the WIN 2000 disk, XP disables the
setup because it is an older version of windows.


You can't go from XP to 2000 as if you were upgrading. You'll
need to install 2000 cleanly. Boot from the 2000 CD and follow
the prompts.

The clean installation will wipe out everything on the drive, so
be sure to first back up all the data files you need.
 
Greetings --

If you want to replace WinXP with an earlier OS, you're certainly
entitled to do so, as long as you've purchased a legitimate copy of
that earlier OS. (Although I can't imagine why you'd want to.)

Before proceeding, though, you'd better take a few minutes to see
if there are any device drivers for the older OS available for the new
machine. There may not be, if the PC was specifically designed by its
manufacturer for WinXP. Also, check with the PC vendor to determine
whether or not replacing the pre-installed OS will void your warranty
and/or any service agreement(s), as normally the case.

To replace WinXP with an earlier OS, you'll have to boot from the
appropriate boot disk, format the hard drive, and install. There is
no supported downgrade path or technique.

Simply boot from the Win2K installation CD. You'll be offered the
opportunity to delete, create, and/or format the system partition as
part of the installation process. (You may need to re-arrange the
order of boot devices in the PC's BIOS to boot from the CD.)


Bruce Chambers

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