thomasw234
Senior Member
- Joined
- May 10, 2009
- Messages
- 138
This is a quote from one of the stickys:Hi,
Here in the UK I can pre-order Windows 7 Home Premium or Professional for £30 (inc VAT and delivery). I can also pay £9 for a disc as opposed to a digital download.
I want to do this, but the disc is an upgrade disc, so I'm wondering what you'll need to perform a clean install. I have genuine copies of XP Home and Vista Home Premium, but if I do a clean install, how does the upgrade disc know this? :S I remember with Windows 98 you had to insert a Windows 95 disc to prove you had it, but today I can imagine that this would be too easy for pirates! I have the disc for Vista Home Premium to go with the code, but not for XP Home.
I've read the stickies, but they were about upgrading, whereas I want to do a clean install!
Thanks,
Thomas.
thomasw234;80891(I'm going for Professional over Home Premium as they're the same price!). Thomas.[/QUOTE said:Thomasw has this figured out, but if this question lingers in anyone else's mind: If a higher tier OS in Windows 7 is the same price as a lower tier, always go for the higher. Unlike with Vista, you only gain features as you move up in Windows 7 and never lose any features. There is never a decision such as, "Do I need Media Center or do I need easier networking?". Every feature available on one level is carried to the next with more features added.
Is the Windows 7 version available for student the 32-bit version or the 64-bit version? Are you able to get each? Also, if the software you get is an upgrade version, are you able to install 64-bit version if you are currently running 32-bit version?
Are you sure? I had to choose 32 or 64 bit (I went for 64).