Great! Glad it's working for you!
Neemo gets the credit then on this one for suggesting it.
I would mention to you that if that Dell PC had Vista on it when you bought it, it is nearing it's end of life, (and is about 9 years old) as Microsoft is discontinuing all support for Vista in
2018, Win7 in 2020.
From a software standpoint you've got about 4 years left on that computer. From a hardware standpoint, computers today very rarely last over 10 years, with the exception of Dells. I have one Dell laptop that was built in 1999 (17 years old) and still turns on and run. But, it's so antiquated you can't do anything with it and since the RAM can't be upgraded to even 2GB; it's basically a doorstop along with my Win95 and Win98 computers I have laying around.
If you haven't replaced the Hard Drive in that PC since you bought it, you should do it sooner rather than later.
In that regards, I strongly urge you to make an image backup of your existing Win7 configuration using the free Macrium Reflect software found here:
Macrium Reflect Free.
And if you've never done an Image backup before, you'll need an inexpensive external usb hard drive which run about
$60 US for a 1TB drive which should give you plenty of space to store at least 3 complete backup images. This is a really good idea to have this capability to protect all your personal data from irretrievable data loss.
Here's a great step-by-step video from Britec on how to make your 1st Image Backup:

.
Many of us Techs here on WF use this software or similar to protect our aging (and new!) computers.
Best of luck,
<<<BBJ>>>