Upgrade win2000

G

Guest

Dear Windowers,

does anyone what happens at an upgrade from win98se to win2000? I have the
upgrade CD and not the blank install CD. Do all installations and
institutions remain the same; or does everything need to be reinstalled?

I have heard that at winxp the option exists a new type code (FAT or
something else?!?) might be installed. This is, however, makes it impossible
to install win98se in the future.
Does anyone know what this code is called and if this issue is also the case
for upgrade to win2000?

Grt, Wing
 
D

Dave Patrick

Sounds like you might be talking about the NTFS file system. No, that isn't
true you *can* delete the partition and reinstall win9x. NTFS is the native
file system of Windows NT/2000/XP/2003 and is always recommended.

Be advised that upgrades from win9x almost always fail for any number of
reasons. Save yourself some time and trouble, given that you'll more than
likely end up with an unstable OS with all the remnants/ corruption left
behind from the upgrade. Best to blow it all away and go for the clean
install.

To do a clean install, either boot the Windows 2000 install CD-Rom or setup
disks. The set of four install disks can be created from your Windows 2000
CD-Rom; change to the \bootdisk directory on the CD-Rom and execute
makeboot.exe (from dos) or makebt32.exe (from 32 bit) and follow the
prompts.

Setup inspects your computer's hardware configuration and then begins to
install the Setup and driver files. When the Windows 2000 Professional
screen appears, press ENTER to set up Windows 2000 Professional.

Read the license agreement, and then press the F8 key to accept the terms of
the license agreement and continue the installation.

When the Windows 2000 Professional Setup screen appears, all the existing
partitions and the unpartitioned spaces are listed for each physical hard
disk. Use the ARROW keys to select the partitions Press D to delete an
existing partition, If you press D to delete an existing partition, you must
then press L (or press ENTER, and then press L if it is the System
partition) to confirm that you want to delete the partition. Repeat this
step for each of the existing partitions When all the partitions are deleted
press F3 to exit setup, (to avoid unexpected drive letter assignments with
your new install) then restart the pc then when you get to this point in
setup again select the unpartitioned space, and then press C to create a new
partition and specify the size (if required). Windows will by default use
all available space.

Be sure to apply these to your new install before connecting to any network.

http://download.microsoft.com/download/E/6/A/E6A04295-D2A8-40D0-A0C5-241BFECD095E/W2KSP4_EN.EXE
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/MS03-043.mspx
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/MS03-049.mspx

Then

Rollup 1 for Microsoft Windows 2000 Service Pack 4
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/...CF-8850-4531-B52B-BF28B324C662&displaylang=en

During Windows 2000 setup, at some point, will want to confirm the previous
operating system for the upgrade; at that point you'll simply insert the
qualified product install CD for it to verify. Then the install will
proceed.

Check the pc, mobo or hardware manufacturer's web site for the latest bios
and or Windows 2000 drivers for your devices.

--

Regards,

Dave Patrick ....Please no email replies - reply in newsgroup.
Microsoft Certified Professional
Microsoft MVP [Windows]
http://www.microsoft.com/protect

:
| Dear Windowers,
|
| does anyone what happens at an upgrade from win98se to win2000? I have the
| upgrade CD and not the blank install CD. Do all installations and
| institutions remain the same; or does everything need to be reinstalled?
|
| I have heard that at winxp the option exists a new type code (FAT or
| something else?!?) might be installed. This is, however, makes it
impossible
| to install win98se in the future.
| Does anyone know what this code is called and if this issue is also the
case
| for upgrade to win2000?
|
| Grt, Wing
 
G

Guest

Dear Dave,

thank you for your help, though I need to re-read your advise on a clean
install. Sounds a bit fuzzy to me.

Grt,
Wing


Dave Patrick said:
Sounds like you might be talking about the NTFS file system. No, that isn't
true you *can* delete the partition and reinstall win9x. NTFS is the native
file system of Windows NT/2000/XP/2003 and is always recommended.

Be advised that upgrades from win9x almost always fail for any number of
reasons. Save yourself some time and trouble, given that you'll more than
likely end up with an unstable OS with all the remnants/ corruption left
behind from the upgrade. Best to blow it all away and go for the clean
install.

To do a clean install, either boot the Windows 2000 install CD-Rom or setup
disks. The set of four install disks can be created from your Windows 2000
CD-Rom; change to the \bootdisk directory on the CD-Rom and execute
makeboot.exe (from dos) or makebt32.exe (from 32 bit) and follow the
prompts.

Setup inspects your computer's hardware configuration and then begins to
install the Setup and driver files. When the Windows 2000 Professional
screen appears, press ENTER to set up Windows 2000 Professional.

Read the license agreement, and then press the F8 key to accept the terms of
the license agreement and continue the installation.

When the Windows 2000 Professional Setup screen appears, all the existing
partitions and the unpartitioned spaces are listed for each physical hard
disk. Use the ARROW keys to select the partitions Press D to delete an
existing partition, If you press D to delete an existing partition, you must
then press L (or press ENTER, and then press L if it is the System
partition) to confirm that you want to delete the partition. Repeat this
step for each of the existing partitions When all the partitions are deleted
press F3 to exit setup, (to avoid unexpected drive letter assignments with
your new install) then restart the pc then when you get to this point in
setup again select the unpartitioned space, and then press C to create a new
partition and specify the size (if required). Windows will by default use
all available space.

Be sure to apply these to your new install before connecting to any network.

http://download.microsoft.com/download/E/6/A/E6A04295-D2A8-40D0-A0C5-241BFECD095E/W2KSP4_EN.EXE
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/MS03-043.mspx
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/MS03-049.mspx

Then

Rollup 1 for Microsoft Windows 2000 Service Pack 4
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/...CF-8850-4531-B52B-BF28B324C662&displaylang=en

During Windows 2000 setup, at some point, will want to confirm the previous
operating system for the upgrade; at that point you'll simply insert the
qualified product install CD for it to verify. Then the install will
proceed.

Check the pc, mobo or hardware manufacturer's web site for the latest bios
and or Windows 2000 drivers for your devices.

--

Regards,

Dave Patrick ....Please no email replies - reply in newsgroup.
Microsoft Certified Professional
Microsoft MVP [Windows]
http://www.microsoft.com/protect

:
| Dear Windowers,
|
| does anyone what happens at an upgrade from win98se to win2000? I have the
| upgrade CD and not the blank install CD. Do all installations and
| institutions remain the same; or does everything need to be reinstalled?
|
| I have heard that at winxp the option exists a new type code (FAT or
| something else?!?) might be installed. This is, however, makes it
impossible
| to install win98se in the future.
| Does anyone know what this code is called and if this issue is also the
case
| for upgrade to win2000?
|
| Grt, Wing
 
G

Guest

Wait a moment, did I read this right... w2k3?!?

I thought the followup of winxp is win vista...

About the NTFS undo with partition deletion, will this happen with a restore
CD from the manufacturer of my (Sony) laptop? If I understood the salesman
correctly, he told me when using the restore CD, the laptop will be in the
exact same condition when I just bought it.
Is this correct?

Grt,
Wing

Dave Patrick said:
Sounds like you might be talking about the NTFS file system. No, that isn't
true you *can* delete the partition and reinstall win9x. NTFS is the native
file system of Windows NT/2000/XP/2003 and is always recommended.

Be advised that upgrades from win9x almost always fail for any number of
reasons. Save yourself some time and trouble, given that you'll more than
likely end up with an unstable OS with all the remnants/ corruption left
behind from the upgrade. Best to blow it all away and go for the clean
install.

To do a clean install, either boot the Windows 2000 install CD-Rom or setup
disks. The set of four install disks can be created from your Windows 2000
CD-Rom; change to the \bootdisk directory on the CD-Rom and execute
makeboot.exe (from dos) or makebt32.exe (from 32 bit) and follow the
prompts.

Setup inspects your computer's hardware configuration and then begins to
install the Setup and driver files. When the Windows 2000 Professional
screen appears, press ENTER to set up Windows 2000 Professional.

Read the license agreement, and then press the F8 key to accept the terms of
the license agreement and continue the installation.

When the Windows 2000 Professional Setup screen appears, all the existing
partitions and the unpartitioned spaces are listed for each physical hard
disk. Use the ARROW keys to select the partitions Press D to delete an
existing partition, If you press D to delete an existing partition, you must
then press L (or press ENTER, and then press L if it is the System
partition) to confirm that you want to delete the partition. Repeat this
step for each of the existing partitions When all the partitions are deleted
press F3 to exit setup, (to avoid unexpected drive letter assignments with
your new install) then restart the pc then when you get to this point in
setup again select the unpartitioned space, and then press C to create a new
partition and specify the size (if required). Windows will by default use
all available space.

Be sure to apply these to your new install before connecting to any network.

http://download.microsoft.com/download/E/6/A/E6A04295-D2A8-40D0-A0C5-241BFECD095E/W2KSP4_EN.EXE
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/MS03-043.mspx
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/MS03-049.mspx

Then

Rollup 1 for Microsoft Windows 2000 Service Pack 4
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/...CF-8850-4531-B52B-BF28B324C662&displaylang=en

During Windows 2000 setup, at some point, will want to confirm the previous
operating system for the upgrade; at that point you'll simply insert the
qualified product install CD for it to verify. Then the install will
proceed.

Check the pc, mobo or hardware manufacturer's web site for the latest bios
and or Windows 2000 drivers for your devices.

--

Regards,

Dave Patrick ....Please no email replies - reply in newsgroup.
Microsoft Certified Professional
Microsoft MVP [Windows]
http://www.microsoft.com/protect

:
| Dear Windowers,
|
| does anyone what happens at an upgrade from win98se to win2000? I have the
| upgrade CD and not the blank install CD. Do all installations and
| institutions remain the same; or does everything need to be reinstalled?
|
| I have heard that at winxp the option exists a new type code (FAT or
| something else?!?) might be installed. This is, however, makes it
impossible
| to install win98se in the future.
| Does anyone know what this code is called and if this issue is also the
case
| for upgrade to win2000?
|
| Grt, Wing
 
D

Dave Patrick

1.) 2003 = Windows Server. Vista is still in beta.

2.) To wipe the drive, some ways include; boot a win98/ME startup disk, run
fdisk and delete all partition information found (as long as NTFS is
primary). Or boot the Windows 2000 CD-Rom or setup disks and when you get to
the point, delete the existing NTFS and or other partitions found, then
abort the install. Or use a utility named delpart. Once removed you can boot
the Win98/ME CD-Rom or restore CD-Rom to start your install.

ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/bussys/winnt/winnt-public/reskit/nt31/i386/reskit.exe

3.) Yes, should be correct.

--

Regards,

Dave Patrick ....Please no email replies - reply in newsgroup.
Microsoft Certified Professional
Microsoft MVP [Windows]
http://www.microsoft.com/protect

:
| Wait a moment, did I read this right... w2k3?!?
|
| I thought the followup of winxp is win vista...
|
| About the NTFS undo with partition deletion, will this happen with a
restore
| CD from the manufacturer of my (Sony) laptop? If I understood the salesman
| correctly, he told me when using the restore CD, the laptop will be in the
| exact same condition when I just bought it.
| Is this correct?
|
| Grt,
| Wing
 
G

Guest

Dear Dave,

thank you for your reply.

Do you or does anyone know if putting win2000 on a laptop previously having
Zonealarm firewall has any unforseen consequences?

I have heard on the forum before, that you can't simply remove/uninstall
Zonealarm without consequences. Some files get lost behind and can corrupt
the system.
Is this also the case if I replace my currently win98se with Zonealarm
running laptop; with win2000?

Grt,
Wing
 
G

Guest

Dear Dave,

how can I create a more partitions? I want to use 2 partitions. One for all
the usual files, and one for backup.

Grt,
Wing


:
and then press C to create a new
 
T

Todd

You didn't say how big your hard drive is.

WIN98 computers tend to have hard drives in the 500 meg to 2 gig range.

You may want to throw in a bigger hard drive if you are going to install
WIN2000.

Todd
 
G

Guest

Dear Todd,

thank you for your response. I believe win98se computers had a larger hd.
Anyhow, my laptop has 9 gb. I must admit it costed about $4000 almost 6 years
ago.

Think that's enough.

Grt,
Wing
 
D

Dave Patrick

During text mode portion of setup you can press C to create a partition and
specify size. Then from within Windows you can use the Disk Management
snap-in to partition and format the rest of your drive.

--

Regards,

Dave Patrick ....Please no email replies - reply in newsgroup.
Microsoft Certified Professional
Microsoft MVP [Windows]
http://www.microsoft.com/protect

:
| Dear Dave,
|
| how can I create a more partitions? I want to use 2 partitions. One for
all
| the usual files, and one for backup.
|
| Grt,
| Wing
 
D

Dave Patrick

Use the entire 9 gig for the system/boot partition.

--

Regards,

Dave Patrick ....Please no email replies - reply in newsgroup.
Microsoft Certified Professional
Microsoft MVP [Windows]
http://www.microsoft.com/protect

:
| Dear Todd,
|
| thank you for your response. I believe win98se computers had a larger hd.
| Anyhow, my laptop has 9 gb. I must admit it costed about $4000 almost 6
years
| ago.
|
| Think that's enough.
|
| Grt,
| Wing
 
G

Guest

Oeps, already split it up into 8 en 1. Seems to work... though I have other
problems :-(
But that is for another thread...

Grt,
Wing
 

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