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-   -   98se To XP (https://www.worldphotographyforum.com/showthread.php?t=1365)

John 22-08-06 19:05

98se To XP
 
Yes, I am still using Windows 98se and I realise that it is high time I went to XP so that I can use some of the modern imaging tools. Can I get an upgrade kit and will all my Programs such as Neat Image, Excel, Word etc be rendered obsolete. Thank you.

John

Don Hoey 22-08-06 20:30

Hi John,

I do not know about Neat Image, but Excel and Word should be fine. Mine still work.

Don

yelvertoft 22-08-06 20:34

They should all work fine. You may find it less painful inthe long run to back-up all your personal data, wipe the HDD and do a clean install from scratch with this change from 98 to XP.

John 22-08-06 22:21

Quote:

Originally Posted by Don Hoey
Hi John,

I do not know about Neat Image, but Excel and Word should be fine. Mine still work.

Don

Thanks Don.

John

John 22-08-06 22:22

Quote:

Originally Posted by yelvertoft
They should all work fine. You may find it less painful inthe long run to back-up all your personal data, wipe the HDD and do a clean install from scratch with this change from 98 to XP.

Thanks, sounds like a massive task.

John

nirofo 23-08-06 01:38

I shouldn't bother upgrading Win 98 to Win XP, it's not worth the hassle and frought with problems, do a clean install on a freshly formatted hard drive partition. Most of the software you mentioned will run directly on Win XP, you should find they are all upgradeable for using with Win XP.

nirofo.

John 23-08-06 09:49

Quote:

Originally Posted by nirofo
I shouldn't bother upgrading Win 98 to Win XP, it's not worth the hassle and frought with problems, do a clean install on a freshly formatted hard drive partition. Most of the software you mentioned will run directly on Win XP, you should find they are all upgradeable for using with Win XP.

nirofo.

Thanks Nirofo will do that.

John

wolfie 23-08-06 10:01

I do not anticipate software problems, but you may find hardware/driver incompatabilites.

I suffered a few of these when I change to XP.

Harry

Canis Vulpes 23-08-06 10:12

Software designed for Windows 98 or other operating systems than XP, Windows XP has a compatibility mode where software can be run in 'windows 98' mode. I have been running XP since it was new without problem and had to use compatibility only once with Sage accounting software.

I am sure you will have no problems.

Wheeler 23-08-06 10:32

I agree that the best option is a fresh installation on a clean HDD. It's a good opportunity to stick in a much bigger HDD, they're a great deal cheaper than they used to be and digital photography doesn't half eat up disc space.

My only real issues on moving to XP were that the drivers for my laser printer weren't verified (it still works although I get an annoying message every time I boot up) and my slide/negative scanner hasn't had XP drivers issued and won't work unless I use VueScan instead (I haven't used the scanner in a couple of years though).

If your PC was originally spec'd for Win98 you may find that it struggles with XP. This may be an opportunity to review your hardware as well.

John 23-08-06 13:34

Quote:

Originally Posted by Wheeler
I agree that the best option is a fresh installation on a clean HDD. It's a good opportunity to stick in a much bigger HDD, they're a great deal cheaper than they used to be and digital photography doesn't half eat up disc space.

My only real issues on moving to XP were that the drivers for my laser printer weren't verified (it still works although I get an annoying message every time I boot up) and my slide/negative scanner hasn't had XP drivers issued and won't work unless I use VueScan instead (I haven't used the scanner in a couple of years though).

If your PC was originally spec'd for Win98 you may find that it struggles with XP. This may be an opportunity to review your hardware as well.

Thank you for the info. I do have two 200 Gb HDDs and 500 Mb ram. I don't think there is room for more ram on my MB. I have thought of a completely new computer but what with other things not sure I can afford it just yet.

Kind regards,
John

nirofo 24-08-06 01:49

Quote:

Originally Posted by John
Thank you for the info. I do have two 200 Gb HDDs and 500 Mb ram. I don't think there is room for more ram on my MB. I have thought of a completely new computer but what with other things not sure I can afford it just yet.

Kind regards,
John

Hi John

Which motherboard have you got in your computer, it may be possible to increase the memory with a bios upgrade, depending on the spec of your motherboard of course.

If you can post the specs for your computer it would help.

nirofo.

John 26-08-06 08:57

Nirofo,
I have run Crucial Span and it appears that I have room for a total of 2048 Mb of RAM. I Also have two 200 Gb hard drives installed and room for one more HDD. I will, therefore, install another HDD and put Windows XP together with Photoshop on that. This will save me upgrading many installed programs. Thank you.

John

nirofo 26-08-06 12:44

Quote:

Originally Posted by John
Nirofo,

Quote:

Originally Posted by John
I have run Crucial Span and it appears that I have room for a total of 2048 Mb of RAM. I Also have two 200 Gb hard drives installed and room for one more HDD. I will, therefore, install another HDD and put Windows XP together with Photoshop on that. This will save me upgrading many installed programs. Thank you.

John

Bear in mind that if you install WinXP on another drive your software will no longer be associated with Windows and you will still have to re-install it all again for it to be recognised by WinXP. You are still far better off doing a complete drive format and re-install, in any case WinXP needs to be installed as main operating system on drive 'C', if you try to install on any other drive letter you will run into difficulties later. Once you have installed WinXP on 'C' drive, you can install a second copy either in another partition or on a separate drive. When you boot up your computer you will be given the option to choose which operating system you wish to boot into, that is, if you have installed WinXP on 2 or more drives, (a partition is considered a drive), you are given the choice of which one to boot into. If you intend to put WinXP as the main operating system on your new 3rd drive, you will need to configure it to be the master disk 'C', this will entail you running FDisk or some proprietary software to install and format your drive/s. You will also need to make sure that the jumpers on the drives are configured correctly for the bios to recognise the order in which they boot. If they are set incorrectly the computer may fail to recognise them at all. I suggest that if you are unfamiliar with installing hard drives you download all the data specs and installation software for your particular drives from the manufacturers website before you even attempt it. Look on Google for info on installing hard drives and operating systems, there's plenty available! Let me know what drives you are using and your motherboard name, model number and spec and I will try to give you more info.

nirofo.

John 28-08-06 10:10

Quote:

Originally Posted by nirofo

Bear in mind that if you install WinXP on another drive your software will no longer be associated with Windows and you will still have to re-install it all again for it to be recognised by WinXP. You are still far better off doing a complete drive format and re-install, in any case WinXP needs to be installed as main operating system on drive 'C', if you try to install on any other drive letter you will run into difficulties later. Once you have installed WinXP on 'C' drive, you can install a second copy either in another partition or on a separate drive. When you boot up your computer you will be given the option to choose which operating system you wish to boot into, that is, if you have installed WinXP on 2 or more drives, (a partition is considered a drive), you are given the choice of which one to boot into. If you intend to put WinXP as the main operating system on your new 3rd drive, you will need to configure it to be the master disk 'C', this will entail you running FDisk or some proprietary software to install and format your drive/s. You will also need to make sure that the jumpers on the drives are configured correctly for the bios to recognise the order in which they boot. If they are set incorrectly the computer may fail to recognise them at all. I suggest that if you are unfamiliar with installing hard drives you download all the data specs and installation software for your particular drives from the manufacturers website before you even attempt it. Look on Google for info on installing hard drives and operating systems, there's plenty available! Let me know what drives you are using and your motherboard name, model number and spec and I will try to give you more info.

nirofo.

Thank you for all that information. You have probably prevented me from stumbling into a whole host of problems. I will get round to finding the info you asked for but it will not be just yet I am pressed for time at the moment.

Kind regards,
John


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