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October 15, 2009

I’m running Windows 7

 Windows 7 upgrade installment II.  Friday night I booted back into the Windows 7 machine and installed the Adobe Creative Suite. Then a few utilities I find indispensable and I called it a night!  Saturday morning I installed Office 2007 and began getting my printers configured. I also installed SpyBot to block any spyware/malware that may be lurking in my future.

Windows 7 moved a few things around, like printers.  It’s now tucked away in the control panel under “devices and printers’ instead of just printers.  It also categorizes all of the devices it finds.  The ones that need help were tagged and with a little work I was able to upgrade all of the device drivers to work with Windows 7, including my Hauppauge TV tuner.  The Gretag MacBeth X-Rite Colorimeter was the biggest struggle, but I did find a driver that would work.  It just took a little creativity to get it to install. I was able to calibrate both monitors easily.

Sunday, was accounting software day.  I know what you’re thinking, why would I have Accounting on my graphics machine.  Right?  Well, it’s simple.  I’m lazy and I don’t want to get up to do billing.  I use Peachtree 2008 and it installs just fine.  However, the email function won’t work.  Some investigation reveals the Peachtree email writer print driver won’t install. After nearly a whole day of not getting this to work, I realize Peachtree isn’t going to support Windows 7 in the 2008 version..  So, I have to boot back into my Vista machine to do billing.  :o(  I ordered Peachtree 2010.

Back in Windows 7, there are some really cool features that I’m diggin.  Aero really works, Ready Boost really works. Great background themes that rotate like web shots and just hovering over the running program tabs on the start bar pops up a thumbnail of all the open pages to choose from.  The start bar has been optimized too. Now you can launch your favorites from the start bar and there’s a desktop menu too.

Monday I moved on to installing and configuring my Logitech Setpoint software as well as the Wacom tablet driver. I also configured Photoshop and Bridge preferences and did some editing in Photoshop.

Later in the day I noticed a scrolling issue in Internet Explorer 8 on my secondary monitor.  It was real jumpy and typing was lagging too.  I worked on it most of the day and my brilliant wife suddenly says, did you try the browser on your main monitor?  Duh, no, I’m too stupid for that kind of logic.  I moved the browser to my main monitor and it worked perfectly.  Now, I start researching this issue and eventually come to the conclusion that it’s my video card combination.  I’m running an ATI X1800 Crossfire (main) and an ATI HD 2400 Pro (secondary).  The 2400 has Windows 7 support, but the X1800 not so much.  I mean it works perfectly but the drivers don’t want to coexist.  So I buy a new video card and all is well.  Thank god for eBay.

Peachtree should be here today, but I’m calling the upgrade a success regardless.  I really like the performance increase and the system boots much faster too.  I think the Video is a bit sharper, could be the clear type optimizer.  Let me know if you run into problems with your upgrade, maybe I can help.

I'm a PC running Windows 7.jpgRegards,

David


October 8, 2009

Moving to Windows 7 this weekend

It’s true; I’m moving my graphics machine to Windows 7 Ultimate this weekend.  It’s been Vista 64 Ultimate for about 6 months now so I’m installing a new hard drive for the new OS.  I don’t want to do an in place upgrade on this machine.  I’ve done an in place upgrade elsewhere and it works well, but takes a long time to complete and doesn’t clear out all the sludge in the user profile, registry and other settings.

Last night I installed the new hard drive and started the install.  It copied files and expanded in about 10 minutes, then restarted.  The restart didn’t see the new hard drive because the CMOS changed to another drive I have in the system.  Because of that error, I was set back an hour.  It booted back to the installation DVD and started the install again.  I didn’t know any better, so I went along.   Long story short, I wound up having to take the new drive out, install it in another machine and delete the partitions I had created and then reformat it.

I put it back in my graphics machine and started the install again, with the CMOS boot drive error corrected.  It installed in about 30 minutes, another 10 or 15 to get updates and join our domain.  Very smooth!

I took the new Windows 7 drive out, hooked up my old drive and put my Vista production machine back in use.  I get back to the upgrade later; I have a hundred apps yet to install and tons of settings to manually re-configure before going live.

I hope to be done by Monday October 12th.   I'm almost running Windows 7

 

David

 

Windows 7 Q&A:

1.         My client wants to upgrade from Windows XP to Windows 7; can I do that?

Yes!  Microsoft has integrated a XP > 7 migration tool right on the installation disc.
            Details and procedures here: Upgrading from Windows XP to Windows 7

2.         Will my client’s computer run Windows 7?

The short answer is “Yes”.  Microsoft has an Upgrade Advisor tool available.   
Click here: Microsoft Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor or http://windows.microsoft.com/systemrequirements

3.         What about my client’s applications? Will they run in Windows 7?

Microsoft has developed a Windows 7  Application Compatibility Toolkit   

4.         I have a client with an incompatible software program, but they want the security and ease of use with Windows 7. What can I do?

You have a solid option. With the introduction of Windows 7 – Microsoft offers “WindowsXP Mode”. This feature utilizes Microsoft VirtualPC (With compliant hardware) to create a virtual machine running WindowsXP Pro.

The details are here: Microsoft WindowsXP Mode Minisite

5.         What about downgrades? Can we still downgrade Windows 7 Pro and Windows 7 Ultimate?

Yes!   “For a limited time of 18 months after the general availability of Windows 7 or the release of a Windows 7 Service Pack, whichever is earlier, the OEM license of Windows 7 Professional and Windows 7 Ultimate will include downgrade rights to Windows XP Professional. After that period the OEM license will enable downgrade rights to Windows Vista Business.”