|
|
Get an Easy Introduction to Vista - Dual-Boot with XP
I've been enthusiastic about all new releases of Microsoft Operating
Systems as far back as MS DOS 5.
I even had good things to say about Windows ME which first introduced
us to System Restore and Movie Maker.
When the video memory in my 4 year-old laptop got fried by the
X-ray machine at Melbourne Airport, it was time for me to move up to Windows Vista.
So I got myself a dual-core Toshiba Satellite P100 laptop with a beautiful 17
inch screen, 2gb of RAM, a 150gb Hard Drive and Windows Vista Ultimate.
Within 2 weeks I'd had enough and Vista with XP Pro on the new laptop.
What a relief! Everything worked again and did so considerably faster.
No more endless pop-up warnings. No more changes for changes sake.
Yes, and I'm an IT professional who does this sort of this for a living.
I've come across people who confuse Windows Vista and Office 2007,
which were both released around the same time.
Office 2007 is a fantastic product and in no way tainted by problems of Vista.
I can see no difference between Office 2007 on Windows XP and on Vista
although Microsoft has built some Vista-only features into Office 2007,
hoping perhaps that upgrading to one will encourage you to upgrade to the other.
While it may take you up to a week to get used to the new Ribbon menu system
in Office 2007, you will like it, I promise.
Anyway, back to my laptop. After a period of enjoying my new XP laptop and advising others to
steer clear of Vista I realised that I didn't want to be stuck forever
more in pre-Vista land, appearing to be as weird and sad as I now consider those
people who still use Windows 98.
Vista does have a few good things, Service Pack 1 isn't too far away
and perhaps I'll eventually get to like it.
I wanted to give Vista another chance, but in a safe way that wouldn't
interfere with me getting my normal work done where, if things got too
difficult, I could run back to the safety of XP.
Dual Boot Specification
So I setup my laptop so that I get the option, at start-up, to boot into XP or Vista.
Below is a picture of exactly what it looks like.
The asterisk next to Windows XP means that it's the default option
so, if I don't do anything for 5 seconds, it will choose that option for me.
These are just my preferences, easily changed by clicking the
Maintenance button:-
|
|
I had some more requirements for my dual-boot system:-
| 1 - |
I didn't want XP
to be able to see the partition containing the Vista operating system,
and vice versa, so that the different operating systems couldn't mess each other up.
Perhaps an antivirus program running on the Vista side might
inadvertently change something on the XP partition and so make it unable boot.
|
| 2 - |
I wanted all my same data files accessible from either operating
system so, if I was working on a document in Vista and things got too
difficult, I could switch to XP and continue with the document where I left off. |
Installing a Boot Manager
The answer was to use a Boot Manager called Bootit NG from
Terrabyte
Unlimited which costs around £18 and is the best Boot Manager I've ever seen.
I won't pretend is was easy to setup.
You start by resizing and then taking a backup or image of the
existing partitions to, say, and external USB hard drive.
You then organise your hard disk into the appropriate number and size of partitions.
4 partitions are required in total, a tiny one for the Boot Manager,
and, in my case, a 30gb one each for XP and Vista and a 95gb one for shared data.
A boot CD installs Bootit NG into the first partition and you then
restore the operating systems from the images you took earlier or
install them from scratch using the Installation CD/DVD.
You can use your favourite partition manipulation and imaging tools
or you can use the tools built-in to Boot It NG.
Because the 2 operating systems are completely isolated from each
other, you don't have to install them in any particular order as you do in other dual boot setups.
Each BootIt NG start-up option can choose any 4 partitions from
up to 255 that may exist on your hard drives so it's capable of the most
complicated multi-boot arrangements you can imagine.
You specify which partitions will be visible in each boot option and so, for XP,
I hid the Boot Manager and Vista partitions and, for the Vista boot
option, I hid the Boot Manager and XP partitions. The Data partition is visible in both options.
When XP boots, Disk Manager and My Computer appear as shown below:-
|
|