Install Vista Upgrade Without Preexisting XP
Johannes K. writes "It has previously been claimed that to install Windows Vista from an upgrade DVD requires having Windows XP installed on your computer. DailyTech reports on a workaround: no previous version of Windows is required at all." Anyone know whether this workaround moots the finding by LXer that during upgrade Microsoft invalidates your original XP CD-key?
Who gives a fuck about Vista?
Smile, don't click...
in fact, XP not on drive or referenced in vista install in anyway, pretty big loophole.
So instead of installing XP, and then Vista, you install Vista twice?
This is only a benefit for people who don't have a legitimate claim to using a Vista upgrade license seeing as an XP->Vista install would take significantly less time.
It's actually much worse. I tried this trick and went out grocery shopping. When I returned, all the locks on my house had been changed.
You bought Vista right, so does it matter that you used to be a pirate?
If you do this, your already illicit key will be invalidated, but there is no consequence.
liqbase
if it never touches your copy of xp. how could it invalidate anything.
use some logic already, damm.
Intentional or not? I wonder if this will end up increasing the value of Vista upgrade coupons on eBay, or if this will be patched before more are mailed out.
Ryan Fenton
Isn't this kind of thing one of the most basic ways to try to cheat the system? How could something this obvious slip through?
This thing only comes on DVD and not CD? Argh
I've seen many blogs that proclaim that XP keys are invalidated after upgrading with Vista. They always link to a discussion of the EULA, which claims that the license is invalidated.
Is there any evidence whatsoever that Microsoft will invalidate XP keys for their WGA check (because they'll certainly still work to install the media) if you upgrade that installation of XP to Vista? Has anyone actually tried it?
Certainly, Microsoft could probably link the two installations, if you do an actual upgrade. If they can do that, what do you think they'll do to 'upgrade' copies that were installed using the Vista->Vista trick? Maybe they'll wait awhile, then decide that these copies are 'pirate' installations, and lock you out of upgrades (possibly drop you down to degraded mode) until you pay a fee to convert your installation to a Full install.
If you bought Vista Ultimate, and have a 64-bit CPU, there's an even easier way... install Vista Ultimate 64-bit version.
The 64-bit DVD booted fine and let me do a clean install from the upgrade CD. I typed in my ugprade CD key, hit next, and it prompted me to accept the license. (The 32-bit CD would not let me do a clean install, I did try that out. It said I had to start the process from within windows.)
Wouldn't the simpler way of ensuring a legitimate upgrade be to take your old XP key alongside the Vista upgrade key, then check them both with WGA? Considering that there's still no real Vista activation crack, it's probably even secure.
LOAD "SIG",8,1
Chairs are gana be flying when Balmer finds out how easy this is.
The greatest revenge in life is massive success.
God I hate when submitters force you to read an entire article, so heres the important bit:
1. Boot with the Windows Vista Upgrade DVD.
2. Click "Install Now."
3. Do not enter a Product Key When prompted.
4. When prompted, select the Vista product edition that you do have.
6. Install Vista normally.
7. Once the install is complete, restart the DVD-based Setup from within Windows Vista. Perform an in-place upgrade. 8. Enter your Product Key when prompted.
http://www.reeb.freeserve.co.uk
Reminds me of the Widows 95/98 universal key: 11111111111111111111
That was nice.
Well, it sounds like this is (half) a step in the right direction. I wonder how long it will be before someone finds a way to convert the "trial" install to a full version without needing to rerun the entire install process. It seems like there must be a way to run oobe.exe or something to validate/convert your trial version.
This guy's the limit!
Explain this "reading an article" to us here on Slashdot.
Or, you could skip the whole Windows XP/Vista issue, and install your favorite GNU/Linux distro. Seriously. I'm using CentOS, and it work very well.
Zhrodague.net - I do projects and stuff too.
I've still not managed to get a clear answer to whether the EULA for Vista means you can never re-install it.
The problem is that the upgrade version invalidates the agreement for XP, which means you are not allowed to re-install XP, which is needed to re-install Vista...
I suppose this work-around does allow you to re-install Vista, but they may well remove this in the future.
I submitted a support request to Microsoft about this a few days ago, but they haven't responded.
Oh, my... Will the spyware require me to have a valid Fedora Core 5 license to install my new FC6? Or will I have to go out a buy a whole new laptop that can handle all of that awesome power?
Heh heh - Just kiddin'.
Anyone got a link to the torrent?
Is there a live CD yet? I don't want to uninstall Debian just to try this.
Five years, a couple of hundred million dollars and they still do installs like it's 1989?
Dear Redmond;
A few tips on how modern install media should work:
1) Ask no questions except to put in the install key upfront. Run everything else with basic assumptions. Run the config AFTER installation.
2) Allow for the easy and well documented input of a param file to create an install script on the fly.
3) Do a hardware seek FIRST instead of preloading every old SCSI driver and whatnot. Look, you guys do a bad job of supporting that stuff anyway, so why bother?
4) Provide a tool to EASILY and automatically move the install CD to a thumb drive and install from there. We are building machines that have neither floppy drives nor CD drives either.
5) For god's sake provide some kind of reasonably good toolset to recover a drive from an alternate boot medium. Enough is enough already that your OS 'can't run' from Boot Floppies and whatnot to run critical tools like fixboot and fixmbr. Just write some damn tools that DO work. Or write a console that runs in toto from some source other than the install CD which many of us NEVER GET.
6) Learn to work with LILO already. Would it actually kill you?
7) Look at a calendar. This is 2007, start acting like there's been some improvement in installation tools in the last 20 years.
After years of bouncing back and forth, I've finally decided to move everything over to Linux and ext2 or reiserfs partitions, even though I do Windows development professionally. With a Core 2 Duo processor, I can run XP in a VM fast enough for all my needs. KDE4 should be superior to Vista in every way once it's released this year. I'll probably even throw the KDE team some money.
LOAD "SIG",8,1
for people with those damned OEM restore partitions who've had a harddrive crash. Or if you just never got install media.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
It's not the 90s any more, only installing with 'basic assumptions' is no longer acceptable.
By the way, does Vista dump if you change your motherboard like XP does because of the IDE drivers only being changeable during an install?
ADVENTURERS! - ANTIHERO FOR HIRE - CARDMASTER CONFLICT
You might want to create a drive image; so you can do an easy restore. Don't forget to delete windows.old; it contains pieces of the old install (XP cough).
What you need is a copy of legitcontrolcheck.dll from any validated and activated copy of XP on a partition anywhere on your machine, then:
1.) create \windows\system32\ on any partition you want (even extended partitions)
2.) copy a validated 'legitcontrolcheck.dll file into the directory.
3.) you might need ntdetect.com and ntldr in the root, (try without)
(I've not tested this)
This WILL be fixed with an install of Windows Vista - Service Pack 1 - Warm and Crunchy Edition. Freedom is irrelevant. Self-determination is irrelevant. You must comply. ~Collective :)
Why do you resist? We only wish to raise quality of life for all species. ~Locutus
On a good note, this means that you will be able to re-install a year later when the system gets bogged down, or have they moved the "Detect and Repair" to the operating system...hmmmmm
Will this cause Bill to run away from more interviews...
A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing. Emo Philips
Global warming is a cube.
How about, "invalid question since Vista doesn't do that?". Please stop trying to be the new digg and spreading misinformation.
Translation may be a bit off, didn't understand a few of the details
- BIOS (bios ID) (not bios upgrade) (9 points)
For those of you interested (or Norwegian), the blog article is hereScully: Should we arrest David Copperfield?
Mulder: Yes we should, but not for this.
Yeah but it's irrelevant. I don't want to babysit the installation so I don't forget to specify the timezone on installation step 132-b and all of the other silly interruptions randomly disbursed through the process. On the other hand the sometimes LONG LONG CHORE of specifying every nit like some Linux distros want is just insipid. don't ask me to choose the order of the disk paritions. I don't really care about a great deal of it. And to be fair, we should be able to run any number of complex post-install config scripts easily in order to tweak everything the way we need. In fact, all of that post install material should run from a second storage medium, a thumb drive during the first post installation boot, unattended.
So in terms of installation, it really needs to be as direct as possible. Then, when it's done and it's completed all of its Microsoftish things; products key, main drivers, disk format (if required, don't make me wait around to respond), wiping out the old gorp and such, then popup config stuff to your heart's content.
And I now see that I misread your question..
The point is still valid though
Scully: Should we arrest David Copperfield?
Mulder: Yes we should, but not for this.
It's great from an "I don't want to install XP to install Vista on a reinstall" standpoint. However, to do it just to save money doesn't work. The cost for Vista Ultimate Upgrade, for example, is $249. The cost for Vista Ultimate OEM is $199. The OEM works the same as retail, no installing twice and $50 cheaper. Am I missing something here? Using either on a system to get out of buying retail breaks the ULA anyway. Might as well save $50 while you are at it.
If you want the full version, buy the full version. It's not even more expensive: get the "System Builder Edition", which is essentially the OEM version. It's the SAME price as the upgrade.
Which is really a moot point, since the majority of Slashdot's zealots are going to pirate Vista, if they can. They may love Lunix, but they use hypocritically use Windows. Not that I blame them: Lunix has always been chasing Microsoft's tail lights, and that won't be changing anytime soon.
With all this hype about Windows Vista, let me tell you what Windows 2000 can still do for you.
* It can copy files very slowly from one partition to another
* It can play all non-existent multi-head games, such as Blizzard's "Stop Pestering Us" and Id Software's "We Tried Once And Nobody Noticed"
* It has single monitor DVD playback
* It is optimized for 1024x768 desktops or lower.
In conclusion, unless Vista has extremely slow file copy or can't play video, I don't see why I should upgrade. For example, I'm planning on getting a WD Raptor, what is Microsoft doing to make sure my I/O is still bottlenecked?
...in a special press conference they held today. The whole conference video can be seen online here. (Note to Windows Vista users: turn off your microphone and speakers at the time 2:35 into the video where the spokesperson says "...this vulnerability can be used to execute dangerous commands, such as: "DELETE C:\*.* /S /Q /F" by playing special wave file...").
installed vista upgrade over valid XP. attempted to install XP using same key on another computer - denied activation (the expected behavior, else activation would just be more useless than it already is). deinstalled vista, then attempted to install XP using the same key again - activation successful.
ta-da.
Do you still have to hit F6 to install drivers, or can you load drivers from the screen that tells you it didn't find any storage devices?
I can just see it now: ... (somewhere in the vista source)
... (do upgrade)
# upgrade check module
if 1=1 then #only for testing! remove in production! -boss
#heh heh, can you imagine if this made it into the gold master? -dilbert
#we don't have to imagine...*merged to gold master* - catbert
stuff |
Ok, but the problem usually comes up when a motherboard fails, instead of just upgrading to better hardware. I know the solution in this case is to do an in-place install, but it's a shame that even safe mode doesn't fall back to generic IDE drivers should the situation come back.
Technology tips and tricks.
You have seven steps.
I have three:
1. Put Ubuntu disk in drive
2. Hit Ctl-Alt-Del
3. Go for coffee.
No not unless you're a high end user. For the vast majority of the world that's simply not the case.
completely ignore the EULA, why are you not just pirating it in the first place? Unauthorized copying is forbidden by copyright law. OTOH I'm not aware of laws that make EULAs binding.
Don't forget, you need to install MS-DOS before installing Windows. You have to find your floppies, and heaven help you if what you bought all those years ago was MS-DOS 5.0 on 5 1/4" 1.2 MB floppy disks.
Does anyone even make 5 1/4" USB floppy drives?
It must be Windows. It needs half a gig of RAM and a hardware-accelerated graphics card just to run Solitaire.
If you choose to purchase an upgrade version of Windows Vista to upgrade XP, you will no longer be able to use that version of XP. Either on another system, or as a dual-boot option. The key will be invalidated, preventing activation.
Actually, it deactivates your XP Key.
Actually, it causes your XP CD to melt.
Actually, it sends all your personal information to Microsoft to make sure you don't re-install it.
Actually, it makes lawyers show up at your door if you touch the XP CD again.
Actually, it uses alien mind-ray technology to make sure you forget your XP key.
Actually, it doesn't do anything, it's just there to "legally" stop you from running both XP and the Vista upgrade at the same time.
Now stop making stupid assumptions. Remember, when you assume, you make an ass out of yourself (leave me the hell out of it).
Yeah, safe mode should really fall back to such drivers. I can not understand why they didn't design it to be failsafe. Maybe the recovery console might help in such cases? I don't know what drivers it uses.
Global warming is a cube.
7) Look at a calendar. This is 2007, start acting like there's been some improvement in installation tools in the last 20 years.
It's 2007.. why don't you just image your machines?
How server process is this:
1) Network boot system
2) Image new server/pc
3) reboot and answer sysprep prompts
A new server/pc is ready in 10 only minutes.
People that try to complain about the window's installer make me laugh. They've already dumbed it down to where you only click 'next->next->finish', yet people still whine.
If the only requirement is to run the installer from another Windows install, is it possible to boot from a "Windows Live CD" such as BartPE or ERD Commander, and install the upgrade from that?
It seems like MS just substituted checking an old CD for checking running copy of Windows.
What they really need is for you to enter your old CD key instead, and on activation, check for the validity of both old and new keys.
Not only do they make the upgrade process more tedious, at the same stroke they make it much easier to abuse.
There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
I seem to see a couple of comments around here that say that an XP->Vista doesn't invalidate the XP key. If so, this would be an improvement.
You see, you can get a free XP 64-bit upgrade for your XP Pro. I have a 64-bit processor, and I have a free (but legit!) copy of XP Pro, so at first it seemed like a win-win, but I was cautious -- I pirated it first, to test it out. Turns out that XP 64-bit broke half my games (the reason I have Windows in the first place) and half my drivers, and the other half ran better than before. I decided it wasn't worth it.
Had I not pirated, I'd have been stuck, and in fact, I know people who are in that situation. Drivers were available for XP, but not 64-bit, and it's kind of hard to know how it will work till you try it -- but once you try it, even though you can install XP 64-bit without having XP Pro already on the disk, your XP Pro key is still invalid, and you can't (legally) go back.
So, I don't really know how Vista will operate here, but I imagine it'll be similar. One thing to love about Linux: If Edgy didn't work, nobody's stopping me from reinstalling Dapper.
Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
You forgot the part about starting the setup wizard and going through the setup wizard, which is quite a bit longer than 7 steps.
By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
I think the "Ask the user before irreversibly erasing all the data on the hard drive" software design guideline has priority over the "Don't bother the user with pesky questions" software design guideline.
Just in case he doesn't get back to your question. I did the exact same thing he did (except for trying to install on another machine) and there is a rollback option that appears briefly just after the CD is checked for a bootable disk. If you're quick you can arrow down and the menu will stay visible. You can rollback to your previous Windows at that point. It does it quite successfully.
Maybe you could even try installing from ReactOS.
Hell, you could even try to install from a trial version of XP, in theory.
Dunno if those would work, but it would be interesting to find out.
WindowsSecrets.com's latest newsletter also has this information. "The secret is that the setup program in Vista's upgrade version will accept an installed copy of XP, W2K, or an unactivated copy of Vista itself as evidence of a previous installation." (Emphasis theirs!) They also address the ethics issues.
Why is this important? Because a clean Vista install is strongly preferred to an in-place upgrade install (munging your existing XP installation so it's now a Vista installation); but Microsoft does not allow this: "you cannot use an upgrade key to perform a clean installation of Windows Vista". This same Microsoft Knowledge Base article then provides a workaround, the same thing discussed by DailyTech and WindowsSecrets: "Start the installation from a compliant version of Windows, such as Windows Vista, Microsoft Windows XP, or Microsoft Windows 2000. After you have started the installation, you can select Custom at the installation choice screen to perform a clean installation."
I'm glad for this particular huge security hole, but it makes me wonder how many more they are.
Stupid job ads, weird spam, occasional insight at
Print in great big letters on the box so that even a consumer can understand it: "This will wipe out whatever is on your computer already by default. If you don't know what 'Default' means, please look it up or get someone to help you."
I know we all laugh at crazy warning labels but let's get serious for a moment.
Life needs more saving throws.
TClock3 is plenty enough for me.
A friend of mine just upgraded from XP to Vista, but just blew XP away and did a clean install. At no point did Vista ask for his old key. So if it doesn't ask for it obviously it won't invalidate the key.
-J
I disagree. Why should the OS install every language it supports, along with the associated help docs, application localisation and so on? Sure, it can delete it from the HD afterwards, but why copy it in the first place? It's a huge waste of time.
There are some questions that should always be asked up front. From the top of my head:
I disagree again. Just because you aren't online doesn't mean you don't need a working TCP/IP stack. Unix has 127.0.0.1 specifically because many applications use it for inter-process communication. Many peripherals, such as my mobile phone, set up a private subnet to manage connections. It's an open, friendly standard and well understood. Every device should have a TCP/IP stack IMHO.
Sure, you could drop the web browser, it'll be out of date anyway. You'd need a mechanism to wget a new version however, wrapped up in a nice GUI if you want to make it easy for grandma. There is really no need for installation media post-install nowadays, provided you've got a bare minimum of connectivity.
Not their fault, they've just never used any of the alternatives. Network booting is rarely used, for unix or windows. It's pretty impressive, being able to reset a box to pre-configured state in under 10 minutes is very useful, especially for software testing.
People who bitch about the XP installer really ought to check out similar Solaris installers from the same period. You essentially needed training on the system to do it correctly.
You can boot off a USB drive on recent motherboards. Distributions like Damn Small Linux will fit on a card and either run as a bootable OS, or can be used to install the OS. You can boot to a fully functional GUI system to prepare the computer for installation (e.g. drive partitioning) then go straight into the install from there.. However, this will never happen in the Windows world due to licensing. On free operating systems, spreading them free of charge via versatile media is part of the point.
Obviously, you need another computer with a CD drive to do that. It turns out, though, that OS X's Disk Utility will happily copy the OS X install DVD on to a large enough thumb drive. Or iPod, or any other writable media for that matter. More than once, I have used this to install my DVD copy of Tiger on to my old iBook that doesn't have a DVD drive.
Sunwalker Dezco for Warchief in 2016
It has been this way for every DOS and Windows upgrade, EVER.
Hello?
McFly?!
"Champagne for my real friends - and real pain for my sham friends!" http://ericblade.postalboard.com/
ARGH!!!!!!!!! You're so on the goddamned money with point number 4.8 23070
I just posted this the other day.
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=219680&cid=17
We NEED to be able to install from modern media, CD's suck, head seeks constantly, spin up times - scratched discs - ugh.
I am happy to look after my discs and use them for sequential playing of data (DVD / CD / Backups) but jesus I want to install Ubuntu / Vista / XP etc from a hard disk, a USB one I've booted from that's emulating the install CD.
It kills me, totally kills me, excellent point to you good sir.
The problem is, the installer (well for XP) asks not only too many questions but it asks them after reading from the disc.
So it's like this
Question #3, drive spins down
Answer it
Drive spins up, does something
Question #4, drive spins down
Answer it
Drive spins up, does something
Question #5, drive spins down
etc etc
good lord I loathe optical media.
Here's my experience with a "free" "upgrade" to VISTA. I didn't even think you might not be allowed to dual boot. I'm a developer. I should have thought.
s oft.flight-sim/browse_frm/thread/87ae9b5715aa9220/ aadcae3403b448e6?lnk=st&q=&rnum=54&hl=en#aadcae340 3b448e6s oft.flight-sim/browse_frm/thread/3ec1191e7c81b8e9/ ?hl=en#
http://groups.google.com.au/group/alt.games.micro
http://groups.google.com.au/group/alt.games.micro
I'm still having dramas adding the state I live in to my address, and I've been told not to expect a VISTA upgrade DVD until April.
Microsoft may have some of the smartest developers on the planet but it's a company run by arrogant fools. If they make it really hard to be legit, they'll reap what they sew. Unfortunately if they go down they'll take a lot of people with them, and if this DRM BS stands it makes the PC a less useful too. It's a no win.
These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
The user is 'forced' to go back and re-instal XP just to install Vista again.... Ends up with a slightly bastardized system (bits of XP left hanging off the disk). May, or may not, eventually find out about the work around and kick self.
Now if MS really is stupid enough to actually invalidate the XP key as a part of the upgrade process, (s)he is going to be sooo toast if there is ever a (perceived) need for a re-install.
This fix is great for the 1-2% of the population that reads slashdot and perhaps another 10-20% that ask us for help, but the rest of the population is gonna be toast if something happens (either on purpose or by accident) to the partition that XP was originally installed on.
Sometimes boldness is in fashion. Sometimes only the brave will be bold.
Uhh, have you actually installed Vista, or are you making things up? Installation consists of: 1) choosing your language, 2) entering the product key, 3) selecting the partition, 4) entering a username, 5) entering a computer name, 6) selecting Windows Update settings, and 7) changing the time. I agree that it could be simpler, but I can breeze through all those questions in less than a minute. And the questions are only asked in two blocks: before copying files, and after copying files and setting up hardware.
Get the Windows Automated Installation Kit, which fully documents the XML install script format. Windows installation has been automatable for generations now.
You're missing the point -- That leaves no way to install WITHOUT wiping a partition either.