Snicklefritz
Junior Member
I had a lengthy two-hour conversation with the Microsoft help desk last night, the details of which can be seen in the image of the chat log that I uploaded to imgur here: http://i.imgur.com/V8rK8qA.png
In a nutshell:
1) Have full version of XP
2) Upgraded to 32-bit Windows 7 (from university bookstore). It worked perfectly.
3) Computer died (mobo failure)
4) Upgraded computer parts (new mobo, AMD FX-8320, and 16 GB DDR-1600 RAM)
5) Read this microsoft page: http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US [...] -windows-7
6) The article from Microsoft seems to indicate that going from Windows XP 32-bit to 64-bit Windows 7 is simple.
7) Bought student copy of Windows 7 Ultimate upgrade disc (not the retail upgrade kit with two discs...special "students only" single upgrade disc) from University bookstore.
8) Following Microsoft article instructions, I...
9) Formatted the hard drive (after backing up of course),
9.5) Had to create slipstreamed Windows XP disc since my full copy did not include SP2 or SP3,
10) Installed Windows XP 32-bit full install,
11) Booted Win 7 64-bit upgrade disc and did a CUSTOM install
12) Cannot do the standard upgrade from XP to 7, have do choose the "custom install" option which acts, from what I understand, as a fresh install. The Microsoft article gives details on how to do this.
13) Once installed, Windows 7 64-bit is working at 99% perfect...except,
14) Periodically get Blue Screen errors, antivirus software can't perform a full scan without locking the computer up or blue screening after about 10,000 files
15) Finally had time to explain my situation to Microsoft help desk last night
16) They say that, because of differences in architecture, cannot upgrade from XP to Win 7.
My question: Did the guy truly understand that I did NOT do an "upgrade" in the traditional sense and that I instead did a "custom install?" What am I missing here? Why does their article give every indication that the upgrade is possible when their help desk says it is not?
In a nutshell:
1) Have full version of XP
2) Upgraded to 32-bit Windows 7 (from university bookstore). It worked perfectly.
3) Computer died (mobo failure)
4) Upgraded computer parts (new mobo, AMD FX-8320, and 16 GB DDR-1600 RAM)
5) Read this microsoft page: http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US [...] -windows-7
6) The article from Microsoft seems to indicate that going from Windows XP 32-bit to 64-bit Windows 7 is simple.
7) Bought student copy of Windows 7 Ultimate upgrade disc (not the retail upgrade kit with two discs...special "students only" single upgrade disc) from University bookstore.
8) Following Microsoft article instructions, I...
9) Formatted the hard drive (after backing up of course),
9.5) Had to create slipstreamed Windows XP disc since my full copy did not include SP2 or SP3,
10) Installed Windows XP 32-bit full install,
11) Booted Win 7 64-bit upgrade disc and did a CUSTOM install
12) Cannot do the standard upgrade from XP to 7, have do choose the "custom install" option which acts, from what I understand, as a fresh install. The Microsoft article gives details on how to do this.
13) Once installed, Windows 7 64-bit is working at 99% perfect...except,
14) Periodically get Blue Screen errors, antivirus software can't perform a full scan without locking the computer up or blue screening after about 10,000 files
15) Finally had time to explain my situation to Microsoft help desk last night
16) They say that, because of differences in architecture, cannot upgrade from XP to Win 7.
My question: Did the guy truly understand that I did NOT do an "upgrade" in the traditional sense and that I instead did a "custom install?" What am I missing here? Why does their article give every indication that the upgrade is possible when their help desk says it is not?