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Upgrade from Windows 2000 to XP
I am currently running windows 2000 professional and would like to upgrade to
XP professional, What are the necessary steps? |
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#2
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Upgrade from Windows 2000 to XP
How to install or upgrade to Windows XP
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/316941 Paul Thurrott's article: "Upgrading to Windows XP Pro from Windows NT/2000" http://www.winsupersite.com/showcase..._2kupgrade.asp -- JS http://www.pagestart.com "Upgrades" wrote in message ... I am currently running windows 2000 professional and would like to upgrade to XP professional, What are the necessary steps? |
#3
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Upgrade from Windows 2000 to XP
How to install or upgrade to Windows XP
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/316941 Paul Thurrott's article: "Upgrading to Windows XP Pro from Windows NT/2000" http://www.winsupersite.com/showcase..._2kupgrade.asp -- JS http://www.pagestart.com "Upgrades" wrote in message ... I am currently running windows 2000 professional and would like to upgrade to XP professional, What are the necessary steps? |
#4
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Upgrade from Windows 2000 to XP
"Upgrades" wrote in message ... I am currently running windows 2000 professional and would like to upgrade to XP professional, What are the necessary steps? I advise you to backup all your data and settings then perform a clean install. If you insist on trying to upgrade win2k directly to XP... you still should backup your data first. Next do a full scan for malware and viruses You will need to uninstall your anti-virus and firewall, then do a disk cleanup. Now from within Win2k just pop in your XP cd and go ahead and upgrade. FWIF: I recently upgraded two Win2k machines to XP... in both cases the machines were in perfect working order. On one of the machines I simply did a clean install, then reinstalled my apps and data... total time was about 4 hours. The other machine...I did an upgrade from within Win2k... by the time I got all the bugs worked out...it was an 8 hours job! |
#5
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Upgrade from Windows 2000 to XP
"Upgrades" wrote in message ... I am currently running windows 2000 professional and would like to upgrade to XP professional, What are the necessary steps? I advise you to backup all your data and settings then perform a clean install. If you insist on trying to upgrade win2k directly to XP... you still should backup your data first. Next do a full scan for malware and viruses You will need to uninstall your anti-virus and firewall, then do a disk cleanup. Now from within Win2k just pop in your XP cd and go ahead and upgrade. FWIF: I recently upgraded two Win2k machines to XP... in both cases the machines were in perfect working order. On one of the machines I simply did a clean install, then reinstalled my apps and data... total time was about 4 hours. The other machine...I did an upgrade from within Win2k... by the time I got all the bugs worked out...it was an 8 hours job! |
#6
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Upgrade from Windows 2000 to XP
On Mon, 2 Feb 2009 15:03:47 -0600, "philo" wrote:
"Upgrades" wrote in message ... I am currently running windows 2000 professional and would like to upgrade to XP professional, What are the necessary steps? I advise you to backup all your data and settings then perform a clean install. Then let me point out to "Upgrades" that I advise exactly the opposite. Unlike with previous versions of Windows, an upgrade to XP replaces almost everything, and usually works very well. My recommendation is to at least try the upgrade, since it's much easier than a clean installation. You can always change your mind and reinstall cleanly if problems develop. However, don't assume that doing an upgrade relieves you of the need to backup your data, etc. before beginning. Before starting to upgrade, it's always prudent to recognize that things like a sudden power loss can occur in the middle of it and cause the loss of everything. For that reason you should make sure you have backups and anything else you need to reinstall if the worst happens. If you insist on trying to upgrade win2k directly to XP... you still should backup your data first. Absolutely. I completely agree with that, as I said above. Next do a full scan for malware and viruses You will need to uninstall your anti-virus and firewall, then do a disk cleanup. Now from within Win2k just pop in your XP cd and go ahead and upgrade. FWIF: I recently upgraded two Win2k machines to XP... in both cases the machines were in perfect working order. On one of the machines I simply did a clean install, then reinstalled my apps and data... total time was about 4 hours. The other machine...I did an upgrade from within Win2k... by the time I got all the bugs worked out...it was an 8 hours job! -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
#7
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Upgrade from Windows 2000 to XP
On Mon, 2 Feb 2009 15:03:47 -0600, "philo" wrote:
"Upgrades" wrote in message ... I am currently running windows 2000 professional and would like to upgrade to XP professional, What are the necessary steps? I advise you to backup all your data and settings then perform a clean install. Then let me point out to "Upgrades" that I advise exactly the opposite. Unlike with previous versions of Windows, an upgrade to XP replaces almost everything, and usually works very well. My recommendation is to at least try the upgrade, since it's much easier than a clean installation. You can always change your mind and reinstall cleanly if problems develop. However, don't assume that doing an upgrade relieves you of the need to backup your data, etc. before beginning. Before starting to upgrade, it's always prudent to recognize that things like a sudden power loss can occur in the middle of it and cause the loss of everything. For that reason you should make sure you have backups and anything else you need to reinstall if the worst happens. If you insist on trying to upgrade win2k directly to XP... you still should backup your data first. Absolutely. I completely agree with that, as I said above. Next do a full scan for malware and viruses You will need to uninstall your anti-virus and firewall, then do a disk cleanup. Now from within Win2k just pop in your XP cd and go ahead and upgrade. FWIF: I recently upgraded two Win2k machines to XP... in both cases the machines were in perfect working order. On one of the machines I simply did a clean install, then reinstalled my apps and data... total time was about 4 hours. The other machine...I did an upgrade from within Win2k... by the time I got all the bugs worked out...it was an 8 hours job! -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
#8
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Upgrade from Windows 2000 to XP
"Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message ... On Mon, 2 Feb 2009 15:03:47 -0600, "philo" wrote: "Upgrades" wrote in message ... I am currently running windows 2000 professional and would like to upgrade to XP professional, What are the necessary steps? I advise you to backup all your data and settings then perform a clean install. Then let me point out to "Upgrades" that I advise exactly the opposite. Unlike with previous versions of Windows, an upgrade to XP replaces almost everything, and usually works very well. My recommendation is to at least try the upgrade, since it's much easier than a clean installation. You can always change your mind and reinstall cleanly if problems develop. The easy way out is not always a prudent game plan. The reason I recommend a clean install is because I have *never* had one fail. Unless there is a H/W problem a clean install is as close to a sure thing as you can get. As to upgrades...few if any have worked 100% correctly... Note: and that's on systems that were clean and "prepped". Properly "prepping" the old OS takes a lot of time and expertese... and is still a gamble. One think I hate is gambling. However, don't assume that doing an upgrade relieves you of the need to backup your data, etc. before beginning. Before starting to upgrade, it's always prudent to recognize that things like a sudden power loss can occur in the middle of it and cause the loss of everything. For that reason you should make sure you have backups and anything else you need to reinstall if the worst happens. If you insist on trying to upgrade win2k directly to XP... you still should backup your data first. Absolutely. I completely agree with that, as I said above. Next do a full scan for malware and viruses You will need to uninstall your anti-virus and firewall, then do a disk cleanup. Now from within Win2k just pop in your XP cd and go ahead and upgrade. FWIF: I recently upgraded two Win2k machines to XP... in both cases the machines were in perfect working order. On one of the machines I simply did a clean install, then reinstalled my apps and data... total time was about 4 hours. The other machine...I did an upgrade from within Win2k... by the time I got all the bugs worked out...it was an 8 hours job! -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
#9
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Upgrade from Windows 2000 to XP
"Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message ... On Mon, 2 Feb 2009 15:03:47 -0600, "philo" wrote: "Upgrades" wrote in message ... I am currently running windows 2000 professional and would like to upgrade to XP professional, What are the necessary steps? I advise you to backup all your data and settings then perform a clean install. Then let me point out to "Upgrades" that I advise exactly the opposite. Unlike with previous versions of Windows, an upgrade to XP replaces almost everything, and usually works very well. My recommendation is to at least try the upgrade, since it's much easier than a clean installation. You can always change your mind and reinstall cleanly if problems develop. The easy way out is not always a prudent game plan. The reason I recommend a clean install is because I have *never* had one fail. Unless there is a H/W problem a clean install is as close to a sure thing as you can get. As to upgrades...few if any have worked 100% correctly... Note: and that's on systems that were clean and "prepped". Properly "prepping" the old OS takes a lot of time and expertese... and is still a gamble. One think I hate is gambling. However, don't assume that doing an upgrade relieves you of the need to backup your data, etc. before beginning. Before starting to upgrade, it's always prudent to recognize that things like a sudden power loss can occur in the middle of it and cause the loss of everything. For that reason you should make sure you have backups and anything else you need to reinstall if the worst happens. If you insist on trying to upgrade win2k directly to XP... you still should backup your data first. Absolutely. I completely agree with that, as I said above. Next do a full scan for malware and viruses You will need to uninstall your anti-virus and firewall, then do a disk cleanup. Now from within Win2k just pop in your XP cd and go ahead and upgrade. FWIF: I recently upgraded two Win2k machines to XP... in both cases the machines were in perfect working order. On one of the machines I simply did a clean install, then reinstalled my apps and data... total time was about 4 hours. The other machine...I did an upgrade from within Win2k... by the time I got all the bugs worked out...it was an 8 hours job! -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
#10
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Upgrade from Windows 2000 to XP
On Tue, 3 Feb 2009 19:01:21 -0600, "philo" wrote:
"Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message ... On Mon, 2 Feb 2009 15:03:47 -0600, "philo" wrote: "Upgrades" wrote in message ... I am currently running windows 2000 professional and would like to upgrade to XP professional, What are the necessary steps? I advise you to backup all your data and settings then perform a clean install. Then let me point out to "Upgrades" that I advise exactly the opposite. Unlike with previous versions of Windows, an upgrade to XP replaces almost everything, and usually works very well. My recommendation is to at least try the upgrade, since it's much easier than a clean installation. You can always change your mind and reinstall cleanly if problems develop. The easy way out is not always a prudent game plan. The reason I recommend a clean install is because I have *never* had one fail. Same here, of course. Clean installations don't fail if you have everything you need (which not everyone does; sometimes finding all the needed drivers is a problem for some people). Unless there is a H/W problem a clean install is as close to a sure thing as you can get. As to upgrades...few if any have worked 100% correctly... That's not my experience at all. In fact, I have *never* had an upgrade fail. Unless you are upgrading an installation that has existing problems, upgrades to Windows XP are almost always successful. Moreover, the rates of success and failure were not my primary point. My point is a simple one: an upgrade is almost always *much* easier that a clean installation, and if it fails, the clean installation remains as an fallback procedure. Note: and that's on systems that were clean and "prepped". Properly "prepping" the old OS takes a lot of time and expertese... and is still a gamble. One think I hate is gambling. However, don't assume that doing an upgrade relieves you of the need to backup your data, etc. before beginning. Before starting to upgrade, it's always prudent to recognize that things like a sudden power loss can occur in the middle of it and cause the loss of everything. For that reason you should make sure you have backups and anything else you need to reinstall if the worst happens. If you insist on trying to upgrade win2k directly to XP... you still should backup your data first. Absolutely. I completely agree with that, as I said above. Next do a full scan for malware and viruses You will need to uninstall your anti-virus and firewall, then do a disk cleanup. Now from within Win2k just pop in your XP cd and go ahead and upgrade. FWIF: I recently upgraded two Win2k machines to XP... in both cases the machines were in perfect working order. On one of the machines I simply did a clean install, then reinstalled my apps and data... total time was about 4 hours. The other machine...I did an upgrade from within Win2k... by the time I got all the bugs worked out...it was an 8 hours job! -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
#11
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Upgrade from Windows 2000 to XP
On Tue, 3 Feb 2009 19:01:21 -0600, "philo" wrote:
"Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message ... On Mon, 2 Feb 2009 15:03:47 -0600, "philo" wrote: "Upgrades" wrote in message ... I am currently running windows 2000 professional and would like to upgrade to XP professional, What are the necessary steps? I advise you to backup all your data and settings then perform a clean install. Then let me point out to "Upgrades" that I advise exactly the opposite. Unlike with previous versions of Windows, an upgrade to XP replaces almost everything, and usually works very well. My recommendation is to at least try the upgrade, since it's much easier than a clean installation. You can always change your mind and reinstall cleanly if problems develop. The easy way out is not always a prudent game plan. The reason I recommend a clean install is because I have *never* had one fail. Same here, of course. Clean installations don't fail if you have everything you need (which not everyone does; sometimes finding all the needed drivers is a problem for some people). Unless there is a H/W problem a clean install is as close to a sure thing as you can get. As to upgrades...few if any have worked 100% correctly... That's not my experience at all. In fact, I have *never* had an upgrade fail. Unless you are upgrading an installation that has existing problems, upgrades to Windows XP are almost always successful. Moreover, the rates of success and failure were not my primary point. My point is a simple one: an upgrade is almost always *much* easier that a clean installation, and if it fails, the clean installation remains as an fallback procedure. Note: and that's on systems that were clean and "prepped". Properly "prepping" the old OS takes a lot of time and expertese... and is still a gamble. One think I hate is gambling. However, don't assume that doing an upgrade relieves you of the need to backup your data, etc. before beginning. Before starting to upgrade, it's always prudent to recognize that things like a sudden power loss can occur in the middle of it and cause the loss of everything. For that reason you should make sure you have backups and anything else you need to reinstall if the worst happens. If you insist on trying to upgrade win2k directly to XP... you still should backup your data first. Absolutely. I completely agree with that, as I said above. Next do a full scan for malware and viruses You will need to uninstall your anti-virus and firewall, then do a disk cleanup. Now from within Win2k just pop in your XP cd and go ahead and upgrade. FWIF: I recently upgraded two Win2k machines to XP... in both cases the machines were in perfect working order. On one of the machines I simply did a clean install, then reinstalled my apps and data... total time was about 4 hours. The other machine...I did an upgrade from within Win2k... by the time I got all the bugs worked out...it was an 8 hours job! -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
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