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Windows 7 RTM Diary: Production System Setup »
Aug
09
All Topics,
Software
by Loyd Case
This is a first of a series of articles that are more a diary on my experience bringing up the
Windows 7 RTM, and not so much a how-to – though it’s my hope that this series will help users who are looking to upgrade.
The
Windows 7 RTM (release to manufacturing) is gradually making its way into the hands of users. Subscribers to Microsoft’s TechNet and MSDN already have it in hand, but it will be several months before most users can actually pick up a copy.
I’ve got a
Windows 7 reference system running, and it’s humming along nicely. I don’t have much on it yet,
Windows 7 Activation Key, although I just downloaded the Windows XP Mode release candidate), which I’ll be checking out for a freelance assignment.
Of course, having the shipping version in hand leads me to my next step: upgrading my primary production system to
Windows 7. I’m running the Win7 release candidate now. Since it’s my production system, it’s a little complicated. So here’s what I’m doing to prep for installing
Windows 7 RTM on my main machine.
Before I dive into how I’m prepping my production system, I want to mention an interesting oddity I encountered when I attempted a clean install onto the
Windows 7 reference system. That system has two physical hard drives. Both had no partitions on them when I booted from the
Windows 7 DVD. The primary (first SATA) drive is a 7,200RPM Seagate 7200.10; the secondary drive is a 5400RPM WD GreenPower RE2.
When I installed
Windows 7 the first time, it spread itself over both physical drives. The 100MB System Reserved partition and the boot loader was on the primary boot drive, but the rest of
Windows 7 was on the secondary drive. This makes my plan to use the secondary drive only for partition backup and test application files problematic. So I had to disconnect that drive, reinstall
Windows 7 RTM, then reconnect the drive.
Some people don’t care to have the System Recovery Partition at all. You can prevent this small partition from being created at all by following these handy steps.
Now, back to prepping an existing system for
Windows 7.
The good news is that I’m installing the RTM over an existing
Windows 7 RC installation. When you do that, you get a new, completely clean install. At the same time, Windows Setup will preserve your existing installation, so you can always retrieve stuff you may have forgotten to back up.
First, of course,
Windows 7 Ultimate Product Key, is to back up all the stuff that needs backup. Note that I’ve got install files or the install discs for most applications. On the other hand, I want to spare myself some download time for apps I don’t have install files or discs. Then, of course, there’s all the data that needs backup. These include:
Steam Games. I have a lot of games I’ve gotten from Valve’s Steam online distribution service. Steam has a nifty backup feature, so it’s easy to make backups of all your games. (It’s in the Steam application file menu: Back up my games.) Unfortunately, it’s going to take about 11 DVD-sized files to back them all up. It’s a good thing I’ve got a 4TB external SATA backup drive.
Data Files. In terms of raw gigabytes, I have more data files than steam games. In fact, my main user folder contains roughly 487 GB of data. Much of that is digital photographs in Nikon RAW format, but there’s a ton of other data,
Microsoft Office 2007 Standard, including all the files from past articles I’ve written, stuff in the AppData folder, game backups and so on.
Other Data Files. These are files I need to explicitly create just to make sure I’ve got them. These would include bookmarks, cookies and other ephemera from the three (!) different browsers I use regularly, Microsoft Office template files, Outlook data files,
Purchase Office 2007, game save files that weren’t in the user directory and so on.
Deactivate DRM’s Applications. I’ve got a couple of games that perform online activation (the latest being Blood Bowl), and they need to be either uninstalled or de-activated. One set of applications is Adobe CS4 Master Suite. Here’s where I encountered my first glitch. When I tried to deactivate the Adobe apps, I got a “Deactivation Denied” error, with an error number 194:1. That’s apparently a connectivity problem. When I contacted Adobe’s help line, they tried to deactivate from their end – and also failed. Apparently,
Windows 7 Home Basic Key, the deactivation server was down. So I’ll have to wait a day or so.
Curses, foiled by DRM!
While inconvenient, I’m pretty sure this will iron itself out. It’s not the first time I’ve encountered issues with Adobe activation / deactivation. I’m all for protecting intellectual property, but I do wish these companies would make their processes both more bulletproof and more transparent (I’m looking a you, Ubisoft!)
Once the prep work is complete, the system is ready for Windows 7. I’ll cover the actual setup process in the next update to this diary.