Upgrade or Clean install from 2000 Pro

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Guest

Good Evening,
I am finally ready to move to XP professional. I was wondering which was
the better path
1. Upgrad my current 2000 Pro installation ( all partitions are NTFS)
2. Start with a clean installation of XP Pro.
The answer will drive which version of XP Pro I will purchase.
Thanks & Regards,
Homer
 
TechNet at microsoft recently ran a column on this,they say 100%,always
do a clean install rather than upgrade.With either version of xp you can do
a clean install,when booting to xp cd to install or reinstall,it searches for
a prior os,if none found,you simply install 2000,it verifies,eject
2000,reinstall
xp cd,and youre ready to go.W/O the 2000 cd,upgrade wont install w/o a
previous os found on the hd.
 
You can purchase the XP Pro Upgrade version when going from W2K to XP Pro... No need to purchase the
Full version...

http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/pro/upgrading/matrix.mspx

Personally, I think a clean install is always best. As always, its your decision...

--
Al Jarvi (MS-MVP Windows Networking)

Please post *ALL* questions and replies to the news group for the mutual benefit of all of us...
The MS-MVP Program - http://mvp.support.microsoft.com
This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights...
 
Greetings --

Some people will recommend that you perform a clean installation,
rather than upgrade over an earlier OS. For the most part, I feel
that these people, while well-meaning, are living in the past, and are
basing their recommendation on their experiences with older operating
systems. You'd probably save a lot of time by upgrading your PC to
WinXP, rather than performing a clean installation, if you've no
hardware or software incompatibilities. Microsoft has greatly
improved (over earlier versions of Windows) WinXP's ability to
smoothly upgrade an earlier OS.

WinXP is designed to install and upgrade the existing operating
system while simultaneously preserving your applications and data, and
translating as many personalized settings as possible. The process is
designed to be, and normally is, quite painless. That said, things
can go wrong, in a small number of cases. If your data is at all
important to you, back it up before proceeding.

If you really want to perform a clean installation, though,
simply boot from the WinXP Upgrade CD. You'll be offered the
opportunity to delete, create, and format partitions as part of the
installation process. The Upgrade CD checks to see if a qualifying OS
is installed, and, if it finds none, it asks you to insert the
installation media (CD) of that OS. Unfortunately, an OEM
"Recovery/Restore" CD will not work for this purpose; you must have a
true installation CD, complete with the "\Win98" folder and *.cab
files, or the "\i386" folder of WinNT/2K.

Have you made sure that your PC's hardware components are capable
of supporting WinXP? This information will be found at the PC's
manufacturer's web site, and on Microsoft's Windows Catalog:
(http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/hcl/default.mspx) Additionally, run
Microsoft WinXP Upgrade Advisor to see if you have any incompatible
hardware components or applications.


Bruce Chambers
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