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Install Windows Vista
Installing an operating system is not among the 10 ???must have??? experiences
in your life. Rather, it can be a slow, agonizing process, and can be unceremoniously
aborted for a variety of reasons.
Depending on your hardware, just booting up the setup disc can be a headache.
You then must sit and wait...and wait...for Windows to copy some
2,000 files to your hard disk and then go through the excruciating process of
???configuring??? your computer. When it finally boots??”assuming it even
makes it this far??”you then have the unenviable task of having to download
and install more than a hundred megabytes??™ worth of updates and fixes. And
when all is said and done, you still will need to go through and turn off all of
the annoying ???features??? littered throughout the interface and then fix the
myriad of problems that are sure to pop up.
But the worst part is the feeling you can??™t shake: that you chose to install
Windows Vista on your machine, and now you??™ve got to live with it. (Of
course, this may not apply to you if you got Vista preinstalled on a new PC,
at least not yet....)
Both the steps to begin the installation procedure and the procedure itself
can vary, depending on what??™s already installed on your system (if anything)
and how you choose to approach the task. If you??™re installing over an
older version of Windows, use Table 1-2 to cross-reference the old version
with the edition of Vista you??™re installing and determine whether or not
upgrading is an option.
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