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Review last lecture
• Pre-installation checks
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Post Installation
• Identify installation problems• Install patches, upgrades, service packs• MS announces patches for individual patches,
bundle many patches together into service pack, patches and service packs can be downloaded and installed as updates
• Install or upgrade to the latest device drivers• Restore user data files if necessary
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Installing/Upgrading Win 9x/Me
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Pre-Installation
• Must follow checklist of items before installing O/S (refer to previous lecture)
• Follow this checklist for Win 9x/Me
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Minimum Hardware Requirements
• MS gives very low hardware requirements for Win 9x/Me
• Different MS documentation (online, printed) give different values
• Refer to official values in handout (left column)
• Compare them to more realistic values in the right column
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Setup Disk
• Win9x/Me can only be installed on a partitioned, formatted hard drive
• All Win9x come with setup boot disk
• Boot disk detects unpartitioned/unformatted drive, asks if you want to partition and format
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Setup continued
• Win Me CD is itself bootable, allows you to prepare the hard drive
• Both Win9x and Me can be installed on a pre-existing FAT partition
• Refer to figure 14-3 start up screen for win 98
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Setup cont.
• Instead of using setup disk, boot directly from CD-ROM
• Your pc must be able to boot from CD drive (check CMOS)
• Note: Win 98 and Me CD-ROMs are bootable, Win 95 installation CD-ROMs are not-must use bootable floppy
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File System: FAT16 vs FAT32
• Always use FAT32 for clean install and upgrade
• 2 main reasons for keeping 1 FAT16 partition:– Use a previous version of MS-DOS to run old
DOS programs– Your version of Wn95 might not support
FAT32
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Installation Process
• Clean install begins in text mode refer to figure 14-3
• After reboot, installation proceeds in graphic mode
• If setup started, will prompt you to partition and format drive
• Follow instructions• Installation tip: copy all install files to hard drive.
Start install from there. Makes install faster• ScanDisk started, checks for monitor and
mouse, loads important install files
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Graphical Mode
• Prompt for Component Options
• Refer to Setup options on page 615
• Users familiar with Win can choose custom to configure and install specific components
• Compact option does not install many features needed by users
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Continued
• Prompt for product key
• Installation directory (fig 14-8):– Clean install always asks for a directory
(default C:\Windows)
• Same folder must be used when upgrading from Win95-98
• If different folder used, clean install of Win 98 occurs
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Continued
• Prompt to create a start up disk:– Different from Win boot disk, cannot run setup
from start up menu– Copies some useful utilities
• Prompt to save system files, allows you to uninstall win 98 or win Me from the control panel
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Hardware Detection
• Plug-N-Play feature searches for hardware and installs appropriate drivers
• Will prompt the user for driver disk if not present on the hard drive
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Win NT 4.0 Workstation
• Most install steps are the same as Windows 95
• NT usually installed on older machines
• NT is NOT plug-n-play
• Must check the NT Hardware Compatibility List
• HCL is located on the CD ( \Support\HCL.HLP)
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NT 4.0 Cont.
• List the minimum requirements on page 617
• NT supports FAT16 and NTFS4 file systems
• NTFS recommended because improved security and stability + supports partitions larger than 2 GB
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NT 4.0 Cont.
• NT assumes your are installing on a networked computer
• NT can be installed on standalone pc (install process gives you the option to skip the network setup)
• MUST install all patches and upgrades since NT is very old
• Service Pack 6a contains all the latest upgrades and patches
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Win 2000 Professional
• Before installing, check that system meets minimum requirements (page 618)
• Hardware must be supported by Win 2000 OS
• Verify compatibility by checking the HCL
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Win 200 Pro Cont.
• Installation process begins in text mode, reboots, continues in graphics mode
• SETUP.EXE examines HD to determine existing partitions and file systems
• Option to install on existing partition or create new partition for installation
• Boot partition should be at least 1 GB
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File Systems (Win 2000 Pro)
• Supports FAT16, FAT32, NTFS
• FAT: Win 2000 setup will automatically format HD with FAT16 if partition is less than 2 GB and FAT32 if partition is more than 2GB
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NTFS5
• Advantages:– Assign disk quotas to users– Encrypt files, folders– Support Win 2000 Dynamic Disk
configurations
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Networking (Win 2000 Pro)
• Win 2000 is optimized for networking with other computers
• Following are installed by default:– Client for Microsoft Networks– File, printer sharing for Microsoft Networks– Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)
• You are given the option of joining a workgroup or domain
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Win XP Pro
• Can upgrade from the following versions of Windows:– Win 98 (all versions)– Win Me– Win NT 4.0 Workstation (Service Pack 5 and
later)– Win 2000 Pro (including service packs)– Win XP Home Edition
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XP Pro (minimum requirements)
• List from page ….
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Windows Installation/Upgrade
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Preparation
• “Prior planning prevents poor performance”
• Installing an O/S – must follow a detailed checklist for the best result
• Following tasks must be performed even before you insert CD-ROM
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Identify Hardware Requirements
• Help you to decide whether a system is a suitable host for a particular operating system.
• Requirements include:1. CPU model
2. RAM
3. Free hard disk space
4. Video adapter
5. Monitor
6. Other storage devices, drives needed to install and run O/S
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Hardware/Software Compatibility
• Must make sure that the hardware and applications are compatible with O/S you wish to install
• 2 sources for this info:– Microsoft– Manufacturer of device or software
• Check Microsoft’s Hardware Compatibility List on the web microsoft.com
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Cont.
• If your device not listed in HCL, consult CD-ROMs provided by manufacturer for drivers
• Check manufacturers web site for latest drivers
• For software, manufacturer should provide upgrade packs.
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Clean Install/Upgrade
• Clean Installation means completely empty hard drive with no O/S installed
• Upgrade means installing newer version of Windows O/S on top of existing O/S
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Clean Install
• Advantage: no problems carried over from the old operating system
• Disadvantage: all applications have to be reinstalled, each application reconfigured to user’s preferences
• Must format and partition hard drive from scratch
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Multi-Boot
• Variation of clean install
• Install O/S into a different subdirectory or onto a different volume on hard drive
• Old O/S is still intact
• Use boot menu to select the O/S at start up
• Not recommended
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Upgrade
• New O/S installs into same folders
• New installs on top of the old
• Old O/S replaced but data, settings for hardware, applications saved
• To begin upgrade, run appropriate program from CD
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Back up/Restore Existing Data
• Back up user data in case hard drive is damaged
• Find out if user is saving data locally or network drive
• If data saved locally, hard drive must be backed up
• After installation, restore data to local drive
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Select Installation Method
• How you start installation
• Location of source files
• Manual, Unattended (automated)
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Bootable CD/Boot Floppy
• Upgrading: run set up program from within old O/S
• Clean install:– No existing O/S to run set up
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Other Install Methods
• In large organizations, not feasible to install on each individual machine
• Source files placed on a shared directory on network server
• Installation may proceed according to a special script (automatically select options and components needed)
• Scripts can even install specific applications without user input
38
Image Install
• Image is complete copy of a hard disk volume on which an O/S and applications are preinstalled
• Images can be on CD-copy image to local hard drive using special software
• Images on network servers-connect to server and copy image to local drive using special software
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Partition Hard Disk/ Choose File System
• Clean Install: must choose file system before partition (how many, what size)
• No Mulit-Boot:use most advance file system your version of Windows supports
• Multi-boot: Lowest common denominator rule, choose file system so that boot sector must be usable by oldest O/S
• Once file system selected, size and number of partitions can be decided
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To find out:
• Post installation tasks– Identifying installation problems– Patches, updates, service packs– Upgrading drivers– Restoring user data files