Get Vista upgrade, never pay full price
|
By Brian Livingston
Many people are upset by the fact that the economical, "upgrade" version of
Vista won't accept a Windows XP or Windows 2000 CD-ROM as proof of
ownership. Vista Upgrade is said to install only to a hard disk that already has
XP or 2000 on it.
But I've tested a method that allows you to clean-install the
Vista upgrade version on any hard drive, with no prior XP or W2K installation
— or even a CD — required.
|
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.
This enables you to "clean install" an upgrade version of Vista to any
formatted or unformatted hard drive, which is usually the preferred method
when installing any new operating system. You must, in essence, install Vista
twice to take advantage of this trick. But Vista installs much faster than
XP, so it's quicker than installing XP followed by Vista to get the upgrade price.
Why does Vista's secret setup exist?
It's reasonable for us to ask ourselves whether buying an upgrade
version of Vista, and then installing it to an empty hard disk that
contains no previous version of Windows, is ethical.
I believe it is. Microsoft itself created the upgrade process. The company
designed Vista to support upgrading it over a previously installed
copy of XP, W2K Pro, or Vista itself. This isn't a black-hat hacker exploit. It's something
that's been deliberately programmed into the approved setup
routine.