Windows 7 upgrade path for Windows Vista, XP and 2000 machines

windows Windows 7 upgrade path for Windows Vista, XP and 2000 machines

If you’re one of millions users of XP or Vista planning to upgrade to Windows 7 or want to purchase a new computer this year, you should read this first.

Eligibility of Windows 7 Update Program for New PC

Under the rumored  ‘Windows 7 update program’, users who purchased Windows Vista PC from July 1, 2009 to Jan. 31, 2010 are eligible for free upgrade to Windows 7TechArt however stating that this is only applied for Vista Home Premium, Vista Business and Vista Ultimate version and to which version they’re eligible for a free upgrade in Windows 7.

  1. Windows Vista® Home Premium -> Windows® 7 Home Premium
  2. Windows Vista® Business -> Windows® 7 Professional
  3. Windows Vista® Ultimate -> Windows® 7 Ultimate

Microsoft Windows Vista® Home Basic, Windows Vista® Starter Edition and all Windows XP purchased during this period, does not qualified for this program.

Old PC Run on All PC

If you’re already purchased PC run on any Windows OS (all version of XP or Vista) before July 1, 2009, you’re not eligible for this program as well.

Windows XP – Vista upgrade is not possible?

Most Windows users including myself  still run on aging Windows XP. The question now, whether upgrading directly from Windows XP to Windows Vista is possible, technically. While you can anytime purchase Windows 7 for your system when it was released later, apparently it will require extra effort. Why?

Unlike Vista users, No in-place upgrade possible for upgrade from Windows XP to Windows 7.  That means, clean install required which will formatting the hard drive and totally replace Windows XP with Windows 7. This could be troublesome if you run on old hardware though.

But, whether the upgrade to Windows 7 is worthy or not,  personally I think its better to wait for a little while, and purchase a new Windows 7 PC instead, rather than spending time on upgrade, unless you have powerful machine.

Situation is different for business when buying totally news PCs is now a wise decision economically. Microsoft warns business if they still prefer upgrading to Windows 7 from Windows XP directly,  stating the software compatibility issue behind it. Read more guide from Vista Team blog.

  • If you are running Windows 2000 in your environment: Migrate your Windows 2000 PCs to Windows Vista as soon as possible. Extended support for Windows 2000 ends Q2 2010, and as an commerical customer, you may soon find your business’s critical applications are unsupported.
  • If you are in the process of planning or deploying Windows Vista: Continue your Windows Vista SP1 deployment. If you’re really in the early stages or just starting on Windows Vista, plan to test and deploy Windows Vista SP2 (on target to RTM Q2 2009). Moving onto Windows Vista now will allow for an easier transition to Windows 7 in the future due to the high degree of compatibility.
  • If you are on Windows XP now and are undecided about which OS to move to: Make sure you taken into consideration the risk of skipping Windows Vista, which I am discussing below. And know that deploying Windows Vista now will make the future transition to Windows 7 easier.
  • If you are on Windows XP now and are waiting for Windows 7: Make sure you take into consideration the risks of skipping Windows Vista, and plan on starting an early evaluation of Windows 7 for your company using the beta that’s available now. Testing and remediating applications on Windows Vista will ease your Windows 7 deployment due to the high degree of compatibility.

Certainly, all users run on old Windows operating  system wants to go for newer one, but the question is when.  So, do you plan to upgrade your computer?

Windows 7 lineup – 6 editions to choose from.

The Windows 7 lineup released yesterday becomes the top new headline of the day. With 6 versions, it received mixed response from the market. It is a love and hate respond.

For Windows users or those that following them closely (or not), the trend of producing multiple version of similar OS, beginning with Windows XP. As far as I remember, only single version exist on Windows 2000 or Windows Me era.

  • Windows XP – Home, Professional
  • Windows Vista – Home Basic, Home Premium, Business, Ultimate
  • Windows 7 -  Starter, Home Basic, Home Premium, Professional, Enterprise, Ultimate (detail)

Previously, the versions/editions designed based on who the end users (such as home or business) are. From there different set of specifications are grouped together, to become one edition. All versions has the same foundation, what differentiate them is on the special ‘add-ons’ , ‘premium’ feature or complex application that made available only on higher end version, which usually pricier.

The new Windows 7 lineup come out slightly different though. Where instead of users, market (such as emerging market) has been included as one of the factor determining the version.

Do you notice that when the new Windows rolled out, another 2 additional versions added to the lineup started from XP. By the time Windows 7 successor released in the next few years, do you think it will have 8 version? I’ve no idea..

What is the advantage of having multiple OS version? Obviously , you only pay what you need. Why pay extra for Ultimate version when you buy it for your 10 years old kids right??

Confusing? I don’t think so although it does at the first glance. Usually, when you decide to buy something, you’ll go through it on details, rights? You should know about it from A to Z. So the only person that I think will confuse is, who never trying it, using it or having it.

Get ready, Windows 7 public beta out on Friday

windows7 Get ready, Windows 7 public beta out on Friday

So Windows 7 beta is finally out this Friday for general public. If you like the rest of Windows’s users anticipating this operating system, check this out before you start thinking of get hold of it.

  • Released on Friday 9 January 2008  US time( GMT – 6) . Assuming the download started at 12.AM, it is equivalent to 1 PM Malaysia time (GMT+8)
  • Limited only to 2.5 millions downloads
  • Your machine must be Windows Vista SP1 to be able to upgrade to Windows 7. Run on XP?? dream on!
  • Require at least 1GHz processor, 1GB of memory, 16GB of available hard disk space and support for DX9 graphics with 128MB of memory.
  • Only English, German, Japanese, Arabic and Hindi editions available in beta. The rest of language only available on the complete product
  • The beta will expires on 1st August 2009.
  • Available in 32-bit and 64-bit
  • Windows 7 Beta will be download-only – no physical disk

If you think your machine fulfilling the requirement above and you’re willing to take the risk (remember this is Beta), go ahead.

Let me know once you have downloaded it. Please share with me icon biggrin Get ready, Windows 7 public beta out on Friday

via