R
Roger Mills
Flightless Bird
I'm in the market for a new laptop computer. I need to have access to the
same software and data files at two different locations, and have decided
that a single laptop is preferable to maintaining two lots of hardware and
trying to keep them in synch.
Much as I would like to get away from the clutches of Microsoft, I *need*
Windows because I've got lots of software which won't run on anything else.
My current - rather elderly - laptop is running Win XP Home Sp3 and lots of
essential applications - many of which came free with various PC magazines,
and would cost a fortune to replace or upgrade - so my 'new' laptop needs to
be able to run all of these. I've also got a number of USB devices -
printers, scanners, MIDI interfaces, etc. - which need to work with the new
laptop.
Most new laptops seem to come with Windows 7 - and I'm hearing comments
suggesting that elderly software applications (e.g. Quicken 98, Design CAD
3000, etc.) which work perfectly well under XP may refuse to work under 7.
Is this likely? Is there a solution? Would I also need new drivers for all
my USB-based devices?
Would I be any better off with Vista (which I've so far managed to avoid!)
or would I face the same issues as with 7? [One or two
half-way-decent-looking 'refurb' laptops are seemingly still available with
Vista].
How easy is it to 'downgrade' a Vista or Win7 PC to XP - and would that
solve my problems? [I have a valid XP-Home licence from a PC which I
scrapped - and some original (may just be SP1) media - but not the latest
version.]
Other Issues:
How the heck do you backup and restore systems which no longer have floppy
drives? In my current setup, I have Norton Ghost 2003 which needs to boot
into DOS from a floppy - and can then clone a drive or partition to another
internal or external (or network) drive. It doesn't provide the option of
creating a bootable CD. Come to think of it, I'm not at all sure that it
would recognise SATA disks! I get the impression that later versions of
Ghost can backup the system disk while Windows is actually running. Is this
correct? Also, they seem to come with a bootable 'recovery' CD from which to
boot in order to restore a backup. Does this work ok? Is so, it looks like
I'm going to have to invest in the latest version of Ghost!
Your comments - particularly regarding the best choice of OS for my
particular circumstances - will be greatly appreciated.
--
Cheers,
Roger
_______
Please reply to Newsgroup. Whilst email address is valid, it is seldom
checked.
same software and data files at two different locations, and have decided
that a single laptop is preferable to maintaining two lots of hardware and
trying to keep them in synch.
Much as I would like to get away from the clutches of Microsoft, I *need*
Windows because I've got lots of software which won't run on anything else.
My current - rather elderly - laptop is running Win XP Home Sp3 and lots of
essential applications - many of which came free with various PC magazines,
and would cost a fortune to replace or upgrade - so my 'new' laptop needs to
be able to run all of these. I've also got a number of USB devices -
printers, scanners, MIDI interfaces, etc. - which need to work with the new
laptop.
Most new laptops seem to come with Windows 7 - and I'm hearing comments
suggesting that elderly software applications (e.g. Quicken 98, Design CAD
3000, etc.) which work perfectly well under XP may refuse to work under 7.
Is this likely? Is there a solution? Would I also need new drivers for all
my USB-based devices?
Would I be any better off with Vista (which I've so far managed to avoid!)
or would I face the same issues as with 7? [One or two
half-way-decent-looking 'refurb' laptops are seemingly still available with
Vista].
How easy is it to 'downgrade' a Vista or Win7 PC to XP - and would that
solve my problems? [I have a valid XP-Home licence from a PC which I
scrapped - and some original (may just be SP1) media - but not the latest
version.]
Other Issues:
How the heck do you backup and restore systems which no longer have floppy
drives? In my current setup, I have Norton Ghost 2003 which needs to boot
into DOS from a floppy - and can then clone a drive or partition to another
internal or external (or network) drive. It doesn't provide the option of
creating a bootable CD. Come to think of it, I'm not at all sure that it
would recognise SATA disks! I get the impression that later versions of
Ghost can backup the system disk while Windows is actually running. Is this
correct? Also, they seem to come with a bootable 'recovery' CD from which to
boot in order to restore a backup. Does this work ok? Is so, it looks like
I'm going to have to invest in the latest version of Ghost!
Your comments - particularly regarding the best choice of OS for my
particular circumstances - will be greatly appreciated.
--
Cheers,
Roger
_______
Please reply to Newsgroup. Whilst email address is valid, it is seldom
checked.