Moving to Windows 7

Most consumers will experience Windows 7 one of two ways, either by upgrading their existing PC or by purchasing a PC with Windows 7 preloaded. At work, most of our business customers have their own in-house IT support (or a dedicated partner that they work with) to deploy new versions of Windows.

For the customers that want to upgrade their own PC (and have experience installing Windows), an overview of the process is provided below.

For customers running Windows Vista:

Once Windows 7 is available on October 22nd, customers will be able to upgrade from their current edition of Windows Vista to a corresponding edition of Windows 7. For example, it is fairly straightforward to upgrade from Windows Vista Home Premium to Windows 7 Home Premium or from a 32-bit version of Windows Vista to a 32-bit version of Windows 7. The process involves inserting the appropriate Windows 7 installation disc, running the setup program, and choosing the “Upgrade” installation option. An Upgrade is the fastest and easiest type of installation and will preserve your files, settings, and programs.

For customers running Windows XP:

Customers who wish to upgrade from Windows XP to Windows 7 will need to follow a different upgrade process due to the changes in PCs since the introduction of Windows XP in 2001. To upgrade from Windows XP to Windows 7 you must first determine if your PC meets the minimum system requirements using the Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor. Assuming it meets the requirements, you can install Windows 7 using the “Custom” installation option. A custom installation does not preserve your files, settings or programs so you need to first back up your data to an external drive and re-install your programs once installation has completed.

If you are upgrading from Windows XP to Windows 7 and installing it yourself, we have detailed step-by-step instructions here.

If you are a business customer, please note that there are other migration options for you that include a broad range of deployment tools and guidance to assist your migration to Windows 7. This also includes solutions to assess application and hardware compatibility. Please visit the Springboard Series.

For customers who want to upgrade to Windows 7:

We’ve received a lot of questions from our customers about getting Windows 7 before October 22nd. While you won’t be able to go into a store and purchase a copy until then, you can take advantage of our pre-order option which is available now via the Microsoft Online Store as well as a variety of participating retailers.  If you’re an eligible college student, you can also take advantage of a sweet deal on Windows 7 for $29.99 by visiting http://www.win741.com/. And, if you have multiple PC’s at home, then on October 22nd for a limited time, you’ll be able to get the Windows 7 Family Pack Offer, which will provide 3 Upgrade Licenses for $149.99.  Look for more details on this soon.

For more information on moving to Windows 7, I suggest you read our Windows 7 Upgrade FAQ which answers many of the commonly asked questions regarding moving to Windows 7.

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Comments

  1. Posted on: September 25, 2009 at 12:32AM  

    Wont be (legally) upgrading to 7. Cant pre order, overpriced and ultimate users ripped off.

  2. Posted on: September 25, 2009 at 4:15AM  

    I pre-ordered a copy of Windows 7 Home Premium from PC World (the last place I'd normally shop) for £44.99. Is that expensive? I think not.

    We've already moved our office PC's to Windows 7 (having MAPS) and it's like taking off the handbrake moving from Vista.

    Virtual PC is sooo much better.

  3. Posted on: September 25, 2009 at 6:08AM  

    Ive heard alot about "ultimate users are being ripped off" but I dont understand why.

    Is it because unlike Vista it doesnt offer those extra things only in Ultimate? The whole Dreamscape or whatever it was called thing.

    For those of us that ordered the E version (which was full disk, clean install only) which was then changed to the standard version full disk; is this still a Clean install only disk? Or will it offer the upgrade option within it?

  4. Posted on: September 25, 2009 at 7:55AM  

    The guide says to use Windows Easy Transfer to transfer files and settings to Windows 7.

    Which is great, however the big problem transfering from one PC to another, or even from one PC to the same PC is the DRM and invisible licensing restrictions that may be on files but arent obvious to the user, I ran into that problem when I had to rebuild my brother in laws computer.

    Does the Easy Transfer Software transfer licences to, say for Windows Media Files?

  5. Posted on: September 25, 2009 at 8:12AM  

    @Arithon try and pre order a copy of Windows 7 in Australia. You cant and there was no low price offer.

    @MidnightDraven Ultimate 7 is the only version where the price increased and you can only upgrade to Ultimate if you have Vista ultimate.

    To upgrade my 5 pc (2 Ult  2 Pro 1 Home Prem) would cost $AU1700

  6. Posted on: September 25, 2009 at 9:22AM  

    @markm66 sorry to hear that. I read on Gizmondo that the Australian pre-order offer was in early July. Was it cancelled or did you miss out?

    @MidnightDraven

    To quote PC World

    "Dear Sir,

    Thank you for your email dated 26th August 2009.  Please accept my apologies for the delay in my response.

    I can confirm that all pre-orders for Windows 7 E placed prior to 1st September 2009, will now be fulfilled with the relevant full version of Windows 7.

    Thank you for contacting PC World.

    Yours sincerely,

    Scott Howley

    PC World Customer Services "

  7. Posted on: September 25, 2009 at 10:19AM  

    @markm66 Ah, I see.

    @Arithon, I understand that I will be getting the Full version of Windows 7 etc etc.

    I just wondered if the Full version is a clean install ONLY version, or if it will indeed upgrade Vista as well.

    Im likely to format my HDD anyway, but was wondering.

  8. Posted on: September 25, 2009 at 10:19AM  

    I hate it when it gives me an error that it hasnt posted a comment and does it twice.

    Idiot thing!

  9. Posted on: September 25, 2009 at 11:51AM  

    I'm here to chip in with the whole Vista Ultimate Fiasco. Since I decided I would use windows as my primary OS on my Macbook, I thought I would look around and decided I'd buy Ultimate due to some of the added stuff that could proof usefull. Furthermore I bought the retail package, even though it is perfectly legal to buy much cheaper OEM software (I'm from Germany).

    Bitlocker never worked, I don't speak more than 2 languages fluently at the moment so the MUI wasn't something usefull either. File encryption caused file copying issues, Fax features?! Never needed remote desktop connection... oh and the Ultimate extras? Dreamscene was the worst with huge resource consumption even when inactive (hdd space wasted etc.). Sound schemes were weak, Tinker was the best for holding my attention for more than 2 hours...

    Seriously Microsoft, I am a software developer and designer. I don't mind paying for good software but not giving us an affordable upgrade is just lame...

    Please reconsider, I like to stay up-to-date with my software. A $50 upgrade to professional is something I might consider, even if it means a clean install, since I presume most who bought Vista Ultimate know a bit about computers.

  10. Posted on: September 25, 2009 at 2:23PM  

    I have 3 pc at home running on Vista Premium Home Edition. I have Virtual PC 2007 and XP to use softwares not compatible with Vista.

    I'd like to upgrade to Windows7.Is  Windows 7 Home Premium Edition compatible with Virtual PC 2007 and XP?

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