Installing Windows XP
Installing Windows XP
WinXP Home lacks the Remote desktop feature found in WinXP Pro, which enables a
single user to remotely connect to the WinXP Pro machine across a network or the
Internet using client software that can be installed on just about any Operating
system. WinXP Home supports only a single processor, compared to WinXP Pro's
support for up to two.
WinXP Home does not have the ability to encrypt files. WinXP Home does not have
the capability to restrict access to specific files, programs and resources on a peruser basis. An administrator of an WinXP Professional computer can specify exactly
which files and folders each user has access to, a level of control which is not
possible in WinXP home edition. WinXP Home does not include Microsoft's Internet
Information Server (IIS) as Professional does, and thus cannot be used to publish
web pages without a third party program.
In terms of upgrading from previous versions of Windows, only 98, 98SE and ME
users can upgrade directly to WinXP Home, while users of Windows 98, 98SE, ME, NT
and 2000 Professional can upgrade to WinXP Pro.
Which flavour of WindowsXP you choose comes down to where you intend to use it.
WindowsXP Home Edition costs less than the Professional Version, and for average
users, it should be just fine. If you are familiar with Windows2000 you'll want to stick
to the WindowsXP Professional version.
Step 1. Basic installation
Start the computer and insert your Windows XP CD. After a few seconds, the screen
will clear and you will see a 'press any key to boot from CD' prompt. Press the any
key..... he he, there is no 'any' key, this is just a test ;)
Press any key to start the install. The prompt allowing you to install will time out
after about 4 seconds, so if you don't hit any of the keyboard keys you will have to
reboot to install.
The installer program will begin copying files from the CD.
Note: if you are installing WinXP onto a hard-drive that is not connected to a
standard IDE port, for example a SCSI drive, or an IDE drive connected to a
hardware RAID controller, you will need to press F6 when prompted at the bottom of
the screen, immediately after the blue 'windows setup' screen appears. After about 2
minutes, this will bring up a dialog which allows you to install drivers for your SCSI
or RAID device from a floppy disk. Many computer motherboards have RAID
controllers built into them, so be aware that this may be a required step.
The 'welcome to setup' screen appears. Press enter to continue. View the licensing
agreement and hit F8 to continue.
The installation program will then search your drives for any prior installation of XP.
If it finds one, you will be given the option to repair it, which essentially reinstalls
most system files while leaving the registry and installed programs intact. Otherwise,
move forward to the partitioning and formatting section of the install.
The initial screen shows the hard disks connected to your system, and any partitions
that may already be created.
A partition is simply a section of the free space on your hard-drive. Operating
systems use partitions to logically assign drive letters. For example, if you have a
single 40GB drive, you can allocate all the space to a single partition, but then you
could only have a single drive (C:) visible in Windows.
If you chose to divide that 40GB into 4 different 10GB partitions, you could have 4
individual drives (say C:, D:, E:, and F:) within your Windows environment.
Essentially, Multiple partitions allow multiple logical drives within a single physical
drive, and can even allow different operating systems to co-exist on one drive if
desired. Once a partition has been created, it must be formatted to be useful.
Step 2. Formatting NTFS/FAT32
Formatting creates a file-system on the drive, so that an operating system can write
information to it. The XP setup utility performs both partitioning and formatting. If
you are starting with a blank hard-drive, you will see the disk and the unpartitioned
space available. Highlight the 'unpartitioned space' using the arrow keys and press 'c'
to create a partition. You will be shown the minimum and maximum amount of space
you can allocate to the new partition, and prompted for an amount in MB. Keep in
mind that 1000MB = 1 GB.
For now, use the maximum size, unless you have a specific need for more partitions.
Once you have created your partition(s), you will return to the original partitioning
screen. Note that the previously unformatted space now appears as 'Partition1 [new
(raw)]' and has a drive letter assigned to it, which should be C: unless you already
have a partition present on another disk. Highlight the new partition and press 'enter'
to begin installing Windows XP onto it.
You will be prompted to format the drive with one of four file systems: NTFS quick,
FAT quick, NTFS, or FAT
For the purposes of this article, you have a choice between FAT (File Allocation Table
32) and NTFS (NT File System). To make this choice, there are several things to keep
in mind.
will cover this in a second. After adding the user accounts, you are prompted to
choose one, and tossed into the XP environment. So pretty...
But First things first Go to the start menu/control panel/user accounts and allocate
passwords to all the user accounts you created during the install process. Paranoia is
a healthy trait.
Product Activation
Windows Product Activation is an anti-software piracy measure that Microsoft has
instituted to prevent casual copying of the Windows XP operating system. In simple
terms, once you have installed XP using your original License key, you have a 30-day
grace period in which to activate this license, after which XP will not be usable until it
is activated. You may initially activate your copy of Windows through the Internet or
over the phone.
Your License will remain activated until one of the following happens:
You re-install Windows XP on the same computer, erasing the hard-drive - In this
case you will have to call Microsoft to re-activate the license, but as long as the
configuration of your PC has not changed, you are allowed unlimited re-activations.
You install the same copy of XP on a different computer - The new installation will
not be activated, and will have the 30-day grace period. At this point, you will have
to telephone Microsoft, since Internet product activation will no longer work after the
first activation. Installing XP on a new computer appears to be a violation of the
Windows XP End-User License Agreement, however.
You change the hardware configuration of your PC beyond a certain amount - When
you activate your XP license, you provide an installation ID, which is generated from
a combination of the Product ID key from your license, and a numeric hash derived
from certain system components.
The video card, IDE controller, network adaptor(s), RAM amount, processor type
(and serial number), Hard-drive type (and serial number), and optical drive(s). It is
unclear what the tolerated amount of change is, although it is cumulative. Once you
have exceeded this amount, XP will require reactivation by phone. Unlike transferring
XP to a new computer though, upgrading the original computer is not a violation of
the EULA, and users are supposedly allowed up to 4 reactivations by phone per year.
When activating XP by phone, the operating system will provide you with a 50-digit
installation ID, as detailed above, which needs to be provided to the Microsoft rep in
exchange for an activation number which is entered into the OS.
That's about everything you need to know about installing Microsoft Windows XP.
Explore it yourself. As you can see it is quite different in presentation from previous
Windows versions.