Vista to Windows 7 Upgrade: Basho’s Experience

October 26, 2009  |  Featured, General, Review

There is a pop­u­lar, and per­haps even fac­tual adage, which goes like this:

“Never upgrade a Win­dows product; always do a fresh install”

Today I put that to the test.  I have been Installing and con­fig­ur­ing Win­dows since the days of 3.1. My first expos­ure to the product range was Win­dows 2, which my father had on his PC.  My first pro­fes­sional expos­ure was the task of migrat­ing 3.1 to Win­dows 95 at Span­dex Plc in Bris­tol, way back when I was only a 14 year old IT intern. Since then I have developed a career in IT and now, at 32, have a Chartered IT Pro­fes­sional award from the Brit­ish Com­puter Soci­ety. I say this, because it is import­ant that my back­ground and know­ledge level is clear.

This is as much a guide as any­thing else, so in that spirit here is what you need to do to upgrade from Win­dows Vista Home Premium to Win­dows 7 Home Premium.

Things to consider.

1. If your ori­ginal com­puter came with Vista.  That is, it either had it installed when you bought it, or has a “Ready for Vista” sticker on it. This means that Microsoft knows about your machine and it reaches the stand­ards they set for their soft­ware.  Half the battle here, and half the errors in pre­vi­ous upgrades, would have been due to non stand­ard equip­ment that con­fuses the upgrade.

2. Which ver­sion of Win­dows 7 you want to go to. There are numer­ous charts on the Net about this, but essen­tially I am keep­ing this easy and going from Premium to Premium.  I am doing this because Pro­fes­sional is over twice the price, and I am going to try and see if I need it before I go for it.

3. The price of the soft­ware. As usual, and much lam­pooned, Microsoft have pro­duced some­thing like twenty ver­sions of this product. I have gone for the Premium Upgrade pack­age, which i bought, in all places, at Tesco’s super­mar­ket. This was £56 and a quick price check via the red eye app on my iPhone told me that this was a good price.

Things you need.

1. Your upgrade DVD

The Windows 7 Upgrade DVD

2. Your laptop

The Samsung Q45 Laptop

3. A port­able hard drive

Things needed to install Windows 7

4. A large glass of wine

Italian wine, very nice

Now, one of those, you may think, is not an actual require­ment to upgrade Vista to Win­dows 7. All I can say is, “You obvi­ously haven’t done this before”. Upgrad­ing is going to take ages. Ages. There will be moments in the upgrade when you won­der if it has crashed, if it ever going to fin­ish. It will prob­ably look stuck on some­thing at least once; end­lessly rumin­at­ing at a low percentage.

This is all nor­mal.  If you do the upgrade while stressed, high on cof­fee, arguing with your wife or in a hurry: then you will fail.

For me, a nice glass of wine, sup­per on the way and a long Sunday after­noon; that long dark teatime of the soul, is com­pletely relax­ing and the upgrade will not and can­not stress me out.

Even an pro­fes­sional IT per­son is prey for his emo­tions. I once saw a guy kick a £250,000 server because it failed a backup. Failed a backup. As in, it was not backed up and he was kick­ing it! Ser­i­ously, pray heed my advice and whatever your poison is; take a wee drop to relax.

Frankly, if my PC were water­proof, I would do these things in a warm bath with Cesca mas­sa­ging my back!

Here we go.

1. Scan your com­puter with your anti virus.

Do this overnight the day before as this takes ages.

2. Defrag­ment your com­puter. (Time = 16:00)

These two steps are vital. a frag­men­ted com­puter will pos­sibly triple the upgrade time. Mine is not usu­ally frag­men­ted, but this could take a while itself.

Defrag your Vista PC

3. Unin­stall everything you don’t need. (Time = 16:31)

It is vital that you go through your com­puter and remove all the junk you have installed over the months you have been stuck with Vista. It is espe­cially import­ant to remove any­thing that inter­acts with the desktop. So Rocket Dock, Google Chat, etc. Plus all the little applic­a­tions that sit in the bot­tom right (by the clock), any­thing that isn’t made by Microsoft, came with a major product or came with the machine should be removed. I also unin­stalled my fire­wall as I am sure that it is not going to be com­pat­ible. Since my Anti Virus is a free one, I unin­stalled that too.

Windows Vista Start Menu Uninstall screen

4. Backup your doc­u­ments. (Time = 16:51)

Back­ing up is some­thing we all should do more of. Now is the time to copy off your import­ant doc­u­ments, pho­tos and pic­tures. If the install fails, you prob­ably wont lose them, but just in case and you should be doing it anyway.

Backup to external drive

5. Check your disk space. (Time = 18:10)

You need lots of free space to install Win­dows 7. There is an offi­cial num­ber, but on a laptop; the more the bet­ter. This is due to the RAM disk the upgrade will (prob­ably) cre­ate, the more space that there is for this, the less likely your are to have problems.

Enough Space to continue

6. Finally, you can start. Put in the DVD. (Time = 18:12)

Windows 7 install screen Windows 7 install screen Windows 7 install screen

7. The prob­lems screen. (Time = 18:15)

Windows 7 install screen

Half way through the options I got this screen.  These are applic­a­tions not com­pat­ible with Win­dows 7, or may screw the upgrade. Notice that iTunes is here. I quit the upgrade and removed all of these apps. I can always put  them back when I finish.

8. Restart the upgrade. (Time = 18:26)

Windows 7 install screen Windows 7 install screen

8. The final res­ult. (Time = 20:57)

As pre­dicted, I did have a screen where the sys­tem sat on 38% for an hour and then jumped to 80%. This is clas­sic Microsoft and noth­ing to worry about. The sys­tem also restar­ted about 3 times. When this hap­pens do not touch any­thing. Dont press any­thing, don’t answer any mes­sage that pops up sug­gest­ing “press but­ton to boot from CD” or “Chose oper­at­ing sys­tem to load”. The upgrade will make all the choices; let it.

Windows 7 install screen Windows 7 install screen

Wait.

Finally, you are asked for your Product Key, this is prob­ably attached to the inside of the box, under the ‘manual’,

Windows 7 Upgrade Complete

So, I am now on Win­dows 7!  Great, and it only took 5 hours. You notice that I did all this without Inter­net access (I have none at home), and when I get to a café later, I will do the online regis­tra­tion and patching.

Have I had any prob­lems since upgrad­ing? Only one. When my machine starts I get some sort of Intel error pop up. This is prob­ably going to be sor­ted later today when I update via the internet.

Over­all, the upgrade was the most pain­less I have ever encountered. I would go so far as to say that it was easy. At one point I was show­ing my wife the install going and acci­dent­ally ejec­ted the DVD!  Upon put­ting it back in, the sys­tem car­ried on flaw­lessly. Phew.

Does this mean that Microsoft have changed? Only time will tell. But, as a new Win­dows 7 user, I can say that I am very happy!

Regards,

Basho

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  • Brody
    you either need a book or a few more bottles of wine. it gets boring hella fast.
  • Looking at your procedure, I must agree. You're doing it right and are not being paranoid.

    Having said that, it would be easier to convert to being a Hackintosh. OSX is easier, cheaper, more powerful, and is probably more stable. (That jury is still out on Win7, but it looks very good so far)

    When you're finished, you'll have what passes for a Macintosh and have access to all of the free and amazingly affordable software. This is after you've saved a bunch on the OS itself.

    For example, I had Sony Vegas as a video editor. At the time, that was $700. Sometimes $600 with discounts. Now, I have Final Cut Express that does all the same things except faster and easier. $150 on sale.

    All of my Windows games run faster and better and I have the same or equivalent software that was free or dirt cheap. I haven't lost a single file, text, video, or graphic and do everything I please without a worry about viruses, trojans, or worms.
  • KierO
    I agree. Windows 7 is very easy to install, the only issue I have had (doing it for a friend) was lack of Motherboard drivers, which was ASUS' problem and not MS.

    I am very impressed, which the opposite to what I thought of Vista...
  • The Windows upgrade is still working fine and iTunes, etc has gone back on ok. The Intel message did indeed go after patching.

    Basho
  • Baby UV Tent
    How much traffic does this site get anyway?
  • The Website had a burp yesterday, sorry all. Caching has been disabled by a bad wordpress upgrade package. <del datetime="2009-10-28T14:12:22+00:00">I will look into it.</del>

    I am now cutting over to a new host - watch this space!
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