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Does XP Pro and XP Home use the same SP3 Upgrade file?
Thanks to all who replied about my question about whether or not to
reinstall XP. However, no one answered the question about the upgrade to Sp3. Since I have dialup internet, I cant upgrade online. I got the SP3 upgrade file from a WIFI site and saved the 300+ meg .exe file to my laptop. I got it from microsoft.com. But it did not specify if it's for XP Pro, or XP Home. Is it for BOTH? One other thing, can I just copy this to a USB flash drive and run it, or do I need to burn to a CD? I'd prefer the flash drive. Thanks |
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Does XP Pro and XP Home use the same SP3 Upgrade file?
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#4
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Does XP Pro and XP Home use the same SP3 Upgrade file?
Good Guy wrote:
On 26/02/2014 04:12, wrote: Thanks to all who replied about my question about whether or not to reinstall XP. However, no one answered the question about the upgrade to Sp3. Since I have dialup internet, I cant upgrade online. I got the SP3 upgrade file from a WIFI site and saved the 300+ meg .exe file to my laptop. I got it from microsoft.com. But it did not specify if it's for XP Pro, or XP Home. Is it for BOTH? One other thing, can I just copy this to a USB flash drive and run it, or do I need to burn to a CD? I'd prefer the flash drive. Thanks If you have the big fat SP3 file then it is for both versions. SP files are all identical for all systems. No you don't need to burn it on a CD because it is an executable file. Just insert your flash drive and double click on the file and wait for about 30 minutes for it to upgrade the system. You can slipstream it but this might take longer for you to create a CD for both: -- Original XP + SP3. There are valid reasons for making a slipstreamed version. For example, if your original WinXP installer CD is very old, there might be limitations on initial disk drive size, or a limitation on a built-in driver. (Can be tricking adding the OS as a dual boot, fitting it to a partition located on the high end of the disk, and so on.) I did slipstreaming for that reason on Win2K, and made myself a Win2K SP4 CD so I would be ready for anything. It would accept drives over 137GB, no problem. My purchased WinXP CD was already at SP3, so I didn't need to slipstream that one. ******* The SP3 file should be for both Home and Pro, judging by the pre-requisite requirements listed on the download page. WindowsXP-KB936929-SP3-x86-ENU.exe 331,805,736 bytes = 316.4MB "System Requirements Supported Operating System Windows XP Home Edition , Windows XP Professional Edition, Windows XP Service Pack 1, Windows XP Service Pack 2" HTH, Paul |
#5
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Does XP Pro and XP Home use the same SP3 Upgrade file?
Bill in Co wrote:
wrote: Thanks to all who replied about my question about whether or not to reinstall XP. However, no one answered the question about the upgrade to Sp3. Since I have dialup internet, I cant upgrade online. I got the SP3 upgrade file from a WIFI site and saved the 300+ meg .exe file to my laptop. I got it from microsoft.com. But it did not specify if it's for XP Pro, or XP Home. Is it for BOTH? I thought somebody already answered that, and said it was the same for both. One other thing, can I just copy this to a USB flash drive and run it, or do I need to burn to a CD? I'd prefer the flash drive. If I were you, I'd do neither. I'd copy it to the hard drive of the computer you want to install it on, and run it *there* on the local hard drive. Also, why not simply clone the existing drive (as a backup option), and then try it out firsthand, since that way you'd have nothing to lose and will find out for a fact if you're "good to go", rather than rely on some opinions. And in the event it doesn't work, you can simply put back your old drive. Agree on the backup idea. If you only have the one computer, you need a "Plan B" if something goes wrong. I did a transition on a system once, took some hardware apart, and had just the one computer on hand. And ran into problems. I had to get out the screwdriver and undo all my work again, to be able to recover and make forward progress. I learned a lesson from that, about expecting trouble, and having an easy means to start over again. If you have just the one computer, are attempting an OS re-installation, you should have some means of "going back" if you run into a problem. In my current situation, with quite a few spare hard drives sitting in a pile, it's just easier to start with a blank one, do a test install to that, then, if things are broken, install the original drive in the machine and do whatever needs doing on the Internet. Then try again later with the blank drive, until I get it working. And in terms of "worst case" bad luck, I've managed to break two computers while working on them, requiring a third computer to do some Google searches for solutions. In Casey's case, the problem is the dialup connection, and the limitations that presents for tool choices. For example, getting a copy of Macrium Reflect Free, is over 100MB of download. And that means a trip to the Wifi site. And if Casey happened to know something of Linux, and making a Linux LiveCD for various computer repair issues, that can be 800MB of download. There are things out there that are free, but the download is still a nuisance factor. Without a large cache of "tools" downloaded for the job, the next best thing might be a separate drive to install the new OS on. Once the OS is working half decent, then connect up the other drive and transfer some stuff over. Paul |
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Does XP Pro and XP Home use the same SP3 Upgrade file?
On 2/25/2014 10:34 PM, Paul wrote:
Good Guy wrote: There are valid reasons for making a slipstreamed version. For example, if your original WinXP installer CD is very old, there might be limitations on initial disk drive size, or a limitation on a built-in driver. (Can be tricking adding the OS as a dual boot, fitting it to a partition located on the high end of the disk, and so on.) Great idea if you plan on installing it on other machines. Although if we are talking about just one machine, backup and recovery does even better. As not only do you have the latest SP, but also all of the latest security patches, installed applications, all necessarily drivers, etc. The sad thing about backup and recovery method, is it's hard to test to see if the recovery actually works. What I like even better is cloning drives for backing up. Thus after cloning, I use the cloned one and put the original away for safe keeping. I did slipstreaming for that reason on Win2K, and made myself a Win2K SP4 CD so I would be ready for anything. It would accept drives over 137GB, no problem. I am surprised you didn't include the Unofficial SP5 for Windows 2000 too. That includes all patches that was released after SP4. -- Bill Gateway M465e ('06 era) - Thunderbird v24.3.0 Centrino Core2 Duo T5600 1.83GHz - 4GB - Windows XP SP2 |
#7
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Does XP Pro and XP Home use the same SP3 Upgrade file?
BillW50 wrote:
On 2/25/2014 10:34 PM, Paul wrote: Good Guy wrote: There are valid reasons for making a slipstreamed version. For example, if your original WinXP installer CD is very old, there might be limitations on initial disk drive size, or a limitation on a built-in driver. (Can be tricky adding the OS as a dual boot, fitting it to a partition located on the high end of the disk, and so on.) Great idea if you plan on installing it on other machines. Although if we are talking about just one machine, backup and recovery does even better. As not only do you have the latest SP, but also all of the latest security patches, installed applications, all necessarily drivers, etc. The sad thing about backup and recovery method, is it's hard to test to see if the recovery actually works. What I like even better is cloning drives for backing up. Thus after cloning, I use the cloned one and put the original away for safe keeping. I did slipstreaming for that reason on Win2K, and made myself a Win2K SP4 CD so I would be ready for anything. It would accept drives over 137GB, no problem. I am surprised you didn't include the Unofficial SP5 for Windows 2000 too. That includes all patches that was released after SP4. Is the Rollup in a format suited to slipstreaming ? Or is your "SP5" different than the Rollup ? AFAIK, the Rollup doesn't materially change the Win2K OS, in terms of installation issues. Your install would work as well, if only SP4, and then you could run the Rollup .exe after that. ******* Slipstreaming is for cases where the behavior of the initial installation is potentially improved. Nobody wants to spend their day using an old installer CD, and reading crap like this. "EnableBigLba" http://support.microsoft.com/kb/303013 It's just easier to use a slipstreamed installer CD, to get past that point. Paul |
#8
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Does XP Pro and XP Home use the same SP3 Upgrade file?
On 2/26/2014 8:26 AM, Paul wrote:
BillW50 wrote: On 2/25/2014 10:34 PM, Paul wrote: Good Guy wrote: There are valid reasons for making a slipstreamed version. For example, if your original WinXP installer CD is very old, there might be limitations on initial disk drive size, or a limitation on a built-in driver. (Can be tricky adding the OS as a dual boot, fitting it to a partition located on the high end of the disk, and so on.) Great idea if you plan on installing it on other machines. Although if we are talking about just one machine, backup and recovery does even better. As not only do you have the latest SP, but also all of the latest security patches, installed applications, all necessarily drivers, etc. The sad thing about backup and recovery method, is it's hard to test to see if the recovery actually works. What I like even better is cloning drives for backing up. Thus after cloning, I use the cloned one and put the original away for safe keeping. I did slipstreaming for that reason on Win2K, and made myself a Win2K SP4 CD so I would be ready for anything. It would accept drives over 137GB, no problem. I am surprised you didn't include the Unofficial SP5 for Windows 2000 too. That includes all patches that was released after SP4. Is the Rollup in a format suited to slipstreaming ? Or is your "SP5" different than the Rollup ? AFAIK, the Rollup doesn't materially change the Win2K OS, in terms of installation issues. Your install would work as well, if only SP4, and then you could run the Rollup .exe after that. I thought it was ok for slipstreaming. As I looked for my Windows 2000 discs and mine I wrote "Windows 2000 SP4" on them. I must have created them before SP5 was available. ******* Slipstreaming is for cases where the behavior of the initial installation is potentially improved. Nobody wants to spend their day using an old installer CD, and reading crap like this. "EnableBigLba" http://support.microsoft.com/kb/303013 It's just easier to use a slipstreamed installer CD, to get past that point. Oh yes, indeed. I couldn't use Windows 2000 SP0 to install on my netbook since netbooks doesn't have CD drives. But they work with USB optical drives. Although Windows 2000 won't install from an USB optical drive unless it is Windows 2000 SP4. Same is true of Windows XP. As you need either SP2 or SP3 before it will work. Well most of the time. I have one Alienware that had somebody elses crap on it. I knew the optical drive wasn't working. So I used an USB optical drive instead to install Alienware's XP SP2. It worked until the final step and then the BSOD popped up. Well I was going to replace the internal optical drive later, but later turned to now to get XP to install. -- Bill Gateway M465e ('06 era) - Thunderbird v24.3.0 Centrino Core2 Duo T5600 1.83GHz - 4GB - Windows XP SP2 |
#9
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Thank You BillW50 "I need that for my Virtual PC"
Thank You BillW50
I need that for my Virtual PC 2004 Windows 2000 Sp-4 CD Yes Sr. that one Key Works is was looking for http://www.majorgeeks.com/files/deta...ficial_sp.html |
#10
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Answers by: "Good Guy"
"Good Guy" Good Answers
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