[Dxbase] DXBase Survives Upgrade from XP to Windows 7
Larry E. Price
Price.LE at frontiernet.net
Mon Feb 11 12:02:55 EST 2013
Yeah, how does your friend explain the 90 percent market share that win
operating systems have?
Larry
W4RA
-----Original Message-----
From: Crownhaven [mailto:crownhaven at bellsouth.net]
Sent: Monday, February 11, 2013 10:13 AM
To: dxbase at mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Dxbase] DXBase Survives Upgrade from XP to Windows 7
I have a friend who is an MIT grad, IT industry person and he tells me all
the time that he has no idea how the consumer ever manages a PC and Windows.
I agree with him 100%. My son is a senior in college. He and his friends
won't touch a Windows system. I just lost a HD on my machine. I decided
NOT to upgrade to WIN 7. I'm still struggling with loading drivers, getting
things back to where they were, etc. A complete nightmare. Weren't
computers supposed to make our lives easier????? :))
Steve, N4JQQ
On 2/11/2013 8:47 AM, Kim Elmore wrote:
> I've dreaded the inevitable upgrade form XP to Win 7 (and is despise
> the user interface on Win 8). XP is stable, does what I want and is a
> known quantity -- I've gotten passably good at dealing with it over
> the years. I've learned how to repair XP installations in-place using
> what I've heard called "the hat trick," and so I've been happy. I
> don't like upgrading the OS: it's always dicey. Years ago, I started
> out running NT and used the option Microsoft offered that allowed
> in-place upgrades. I went from NT to 2000 and then to XP, all in
> place. I've always had backups and cloned disks available, just in
> case anything went badly, but I was always careful and it always went
> well. I've had everything set up just like I wanted it for years and
> so keeping it that way is a big time-saver. Besides, I have some
> applications I like but for which the media was long ago lost -- like
> the Eudora 7.1 mail client that I'm using now.
>> Alas, all good things come to an end and so it is with XP. WHen
> support and hot fixes end, the system will slowly become vulnerable
> and, sooner or later, any new applications won't run under it. But, I
> really didn't want to reinstall everything, especially since I can't
> because I no longer have the media (or a floppy drive :). So, I
> decided to try a program one of the IT guys told me about at work
> called PCMover.
>> I've always kept my application installations on a separate partition
> (in the old days, it was a separate disk), so I figured I'm set up to
> avoid some of the gotchas in Win 7. With some of my IT friend's help,
> I had successfully migrated form XP to Win 7 (64) at work, so I
> figured there was a good chance I could do this at home. Becuase my
> system has a traceable history back to NT, there were some subtleties
> to handle (the system was partially in C:\WINNT not completely in
> C:\Windows).
>> The process consists mainly of manipulating registry entries and goes
> pretty fast (I used the "PCMover Windows 8 Upgrade Assistant"). I even
> recovered (mostly) my desktop configuration! The test was to see if
> DXBase made it and I'm happy to say it did! It had lost all prior
> references to my data base, but I copied those form my still-extant XP
> system (booted from a separate disk) and, sure enough, DXBase is fine
> (I'm running 2007 v1.09).
>> But some other non-DXBase necessities needed attention. For example,
> all of the USB-to-RS232 devices needed driver updates, including a
> PCIe to high speed serial card I have. Once the new drivers were
> installed I re-set all of my COM port numbers and speeds for my
> various ham-related programs and devices and I was done. Of course, I
> also reinstalled various other drivers for my graphics card and
> motherboard, and I have yet to reinstall my Silex wireless printer
> server on this system, but everything else seems to work fine.
>> I have no interest of any kind in PCMover or LapLink; I'm simply a
> satisfied customer. It's not perfect and it's not seamless, but it did
> what I wanted, both here at home and at work. I wouldn't recommend it
> if you're not comfortable digging about your operating system. If
> you're conversant with XP, WIn 7 isn't all that different and if you
> ant to retain your current installed programs, I recommend you give it
> a try. Of course, keep a clone (not merely a backup) of your current
> system so you can immediately go back to what works if anything goes
> wrong or need time for extended fiddling with the new OS.
>> 73,
>> N5OP
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