Screeling wrote:
Numbuk wrote:
Also, any version of Windows 7 that claims it is an "upgrade" is also the full version of the software. The "upgrade" is just a buzzword. You don't have to have Vista installed to do a full installation of the OS.
The XP Upgrade was this way too. Do you know if Windows 7 will just prompt for any Windows CD before proceeding with the full-blown install or will it only ask for a Vista CD?
From what I understand, it won't prompt for a CD. I am 95% sure of this. It may ask for a CD key from XP, but I am pretty sure it won't ask for an extra CD.
From what I understand, the "upgrade" can be installed just like it was an OEM disc. This is something I was concerned about, because I didn't want to have to re-install XP just to re-install Windows 7. All answers pointed to that it could be fully installed from scratch by itself.
Edit:
Also, and this is important..... The Virtual XP feature of Windows 7 does **NOT** work with games. It might work for a game like Solitaire, but it does **NOT** do any hardware acceleration. The Virtual XP feature was designed more for business applications (to help convince businesses to make the switch). I've tried it myself. It's like VMware (Virtual Machine). It uses it's own version of a virtual video driver, and does not (and can not) use drivers for your own video card.
So if you were planning on using the virtual XP to play your old games as a safety net, don't count on it. You will be better off making a small XP partition on your drive and dual-booting. A little disappointing, as I too was hoping for something as awesome as playing my old games without having to have an old OS on my drive. Ah well.