Should I upgrade to Vista from within Paralles?
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Jan 24, 2007, 02:03 PM
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chuckf11 Junior Member Join: Jan 2007 Posts: 5 |
Should I upgrade to Vista from within Paralles? I have XP pro as my Guest OS. Sometime down the road I would like to try Vista. I current use XP to do any .Net development. My question is can I use the Vista Upgrade DVD to upgrade my XP pro to Vista. I was thinking that when I install XP pro, using the Wizard there is a question about your operating system either XP or Vista. I was going to select Vista, then install XP. Does anyone have any info if this would work? Thanks |
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Jan 24, 2007, 04:13 PM
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dkp Senior Member Join: May 2006 Posts: 1,415 |
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There may not be enough space on your Windows VM drive for the upgrade - it should tell you this. If that's the case then resize the drive. This may be enough of a hardware change that XP will complain about registering the product. Send MSFT a thank you card. Try the upgrade and take notes. If you do it in a window then OS X can be used to take screen shots of critical screens you can share with the rest of us. If the whole thing blows up then send MSFT another thank you card and copy your vm archives from the CD and try again, or just create a new Vista vm. You can have both installed and running at the same time if you have Licenses for both products. |
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Jan 29, 2007, 07:07 PM
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drapsag Junior Member Join: Jan 2007 Posts: 7 |
This won't work. Vista requires ACPI support. Your install of Windows XP in Parallels does not have this support and there's no way to enable it that I can find. Therefore, Vista will not install as an upgrade. You must do a clean install inside a new VM but if you bought a Vista upgrade, that won't work either as the upgrade requires a current install of XP to install. Even having your current XP media won't work like it used to. Microsoft changed the upgrade rules to require a current, activated Windows install to upgrade. |
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Jan 29, 2007, 07:44 PM
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Pleiades Member Join: May 2006 Posts: 80 |
I haven't tried it myself but Microsoft upgrades don't usually require you to have an installation in place. Having the disk is enough. At some point in the process of installing Vista, it'll ask you for the disk. If you put it in the DVD drive, that should be enough for the installer to continue. Now keep in mind I haven't tried it at all so I don't know if it's possible for Parallels to capture both disks (Vista and XP) at install time in a new VM, but in theory, the idea is that you don't need an install of XP already in place in order to install Vista upgrade editions. |
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Jan 29, 2007, 07:54 PM
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Zolk Junior Member Join: Jan 2007 Posts: 10 |
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Therefore, the question is: How are we supposed to install upgrade editions of Vista in Parallels? With no ACPI support, it looks like it's not possible as of now. I should be receiving a copy of Business Upgrade through Microsoft's Action Pack soon and I'm wondering how I'll get it running in Parallels. |
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Jan 30, 2007, 10:14 AM
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drapsag Junior Member Join: Jan 2007 Posts: 7 |
For a Vista upgrade to work, you must have a working copy of Windows 2000 or XP installed and activated already. Verifying media no longer works. The thinking here is that too many people buy an upgrade and then use a friend's CD to verify with. So they actually don't own a copy of Windows already and are getting upgrade pricing without having an original license. That being said, I haven't found a way to install a Vista upgrade into Parallels. I tried to upgrade an existing, working Windows XP VM but it doesn't have ACPI support, so the upgrade doesn't work. I tried to create a new Vista VM and install Windows XP into it, but that doesn't work either because XP will not install into a Vista VM - at least I couldn't get it to work. So, I guess we're hosed without purchasing the full version of Vista. At least until the Parallels team comes up with a plan. |
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Jan 30, 2007, 01:35 PM
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Zolk Junior Member Join: Jan 2007 Posts: 10 |
Windows enthusiast Paul Thurrott has published a possible, but yet-to-be-confirmed, workaround for Vista's new upgrade requirement. It's still not too pretty, but it allows you to install an upgrade copy of Vista without dealing with older versions of Windows. Quote:
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Jan 30, 2007, 01:42 PM
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ZBoT Member Join: Apr 2006 Posts: 33 |
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So far so good. I am installing now at least. Awesome! Thanks for the tip! I'll post back and let everyone know if it works completely and lets me activate. |
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Jan 30, 2007, 02:15 PM
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ZBoT Member Join: Apr 2006 Posts: 33 |
Ok. That allowed me to do a full clean install. I have installed the Parallel Tools and everything seems to be working fine. I have not tried to activate yet because I want to play around a little before I do as I might reinstall again. If someone else activates please post your outcome. Thanks again for the tip!!! |
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Jan 30, 2007, 02:21 PM
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Zolk Junior Member Join: Jan 2007 Posts: 10 |
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Jan 30, 2007, 02:27 PM
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ZBoT Member Join: Apr 2006 Posts: 33 |
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Jan 31, 2007, 06:06 AM
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dentate Junior Member Join: Apr 2006 Posts: 22 |
Vista Upgrade Failure I downloaded Vista Ultimate Upgrade, so I have it as a file. Cannot boot from it. Set the boot sequence to CD/DVD drive first. Toasted the download onto a DVD, but cannot boot the XP Pro virtual machine from it. Any ideas on how to get it to boot from this source? |
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Jan 31, 2007, 09:20 AM
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ZBoT Member Join: Apr 2006 Posts: 33 |
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Jan 31, 2007, 11:24 AM
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Zolk Junior Member Join: Jan 2007 Posts: 10 |
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Jan 31, 2007, 03:17 PM
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ZBoT Member Join: Apr 2006 Posts: 33 |
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Jan 31, 2007, 04:41 PM
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dentate Junior Member Join: Apr 2006 Posts: 22 |
As I mentioned on another thread--but maybe someone here can help--I downloaded Vista Upgrade Ultimate from the website rather than purchasing the DVD. I get the ACPI message. I can't boot from the file. Is there a way to make a bootable DVD from these files, OR is there a way I can use the files to install to a new VM? If not I will have to try to "return" the download (it's called a Letter of Destruction) and order the DVD instead...:( |
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Jan 31, 2007, 05:38 PM
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MSUDVM Junior Member Join: Dec 2006 Posts: 27 |
Thanks zBot, I misunderstood the thread that you were able to UPGRADE an XP install, but I see now that the ACPI issue prevents that. Is there a way you can back upo applications and data from the XP VM and then reinstall that to the Vista Vm, or will I need to reinstall all applications and data? Dan |
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Feb 6, 2007, 09:43 AM
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spinxter Junior Member Join: Jan 2007 Posts: 6 |
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