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Operating Systems

Windows XP – Upgrader’s view
David Dorn looks at just what an upgrade from
Windows Me to XP entails
Before I get stuck into this, let me say one thing
from the very start; I’ve found, over the years, that
“upgrading” a current Windows installation to the next iteration
to be fraught with problems, and my usual advice is to make a full
backup, wipe the drive, and start again from scratch.
On this occasion, however, I’d decided that it was
time to go the upgrade route to get Windows XP installed onto my
main machine. I’d already made backups (note the plural) of all my
data files, and, just before I slipped the XP CD into the drive,
wrote the contents of “My Documents” to CD, just to be on the
safe side.
The actual install process is pretty painless, with
the caveat that I ran the useful (if not very brightly signposted)
“Will your machine work with XP” utility to check what I’d
need new drivers for. Not all that surprisingly, the Alcatel Frog
that my ADSL connection runs over was flagged, as were both printers
I use on a daily basis, as well as my scanner. One control panel
utility for the inbuilt sound card in the machine was flagged as
being unusable, and Zone Alarm would need a re-install.
Aside from that, the only other caveat was that
I’d need to re-install Microsoft Outlook. I’d already decided
that wasn’t going to happen anyway!
Thus it was that I spent 73 minutes watching as the
installer did its stuff and copied across the new operating system.
I’d already downloaded new driver files for the Frog and one
printer, and promptly upgraded them once the incredibly boring
upgrade process had completed.
And here, of course, was where the problems started
Incompatible, unsigned
Microsoft has adopted a scheme of “signing” for
drivers – flagging them as being, if you like, “approved”.
Guess what? The Alcatel XP compliant version of the Frog drivers
trigger XP’s sirens and warnings. “Unsigned” “Not
Recommended!” “Are you Sure?” I just told it to get
on with it anyway, and I’d sort out the mess later. After all,
I’m as much good as a chocolate teapot without a working ‘Net
connection – the ADSL is vital, so the driver had to go in,
whether MS likes it or not.
There’s an upgrade to Zone Alarm that gives it XP
compatibility, so that was the very next port of call – I hate the
idea of not having my firewall up and running, even if XP promises
to give you one of its own. It’s nothing to do with the MS
firewall being bad, as such, it’s just that I know Zone Alarm is
good, and works, and I see no need to experiment with anything else,
especially on my main machine.
The upshot of it all is that I’ve got an ADSL
connection working, and Zone Alarm protecting it, but the rest of my
carefully sorted network settings have all been shot to bits.
Windows XP does not support NETBEUI, so
everything’s based on TCP/IP. Whereas under Windows Me I’d got a
nice little Internet Connection Sharing setup running, so far I’ve
been unable to get XP to handle it. It looks as if I’ll need to
establish one of the other machines on the network as the sharing
gateway, one which will take the previous incarnation of the Alcatel
Frog’s drivers, which seem to be the problem here.
Speed
Now, the machine on which all of this has happened
is a Pentium 4 1.7GHz machine. XP is optimised for Pentium 4,
whereas prior versions of Windows would actually run more slowly on
Intel’s top end processors. I’ve got to say that the increase in
performance is huge – it feels twice as fast as it did before I
did the upgrade, and I haven’t even converted the filing system to
NTFS as yet (and I’m not sure that I will, either).
I’ve decided that I don’t like the “hand
holding” new interface. For me, it’s counter-productive, as
I’m searching all over for stuff I have been able just to put my
hands on quickly. So, within half an hour of getting machine back up
and running, I’d switched everything that I could back to
“Classic” mode and got rid of that awful landscape photo that MS
provides as the standard XP Theme background. It’s a blessing to
see the back of the really rather strange colour scheme that the
“new look” uses as well.
Nice bits
I’ve had one or two programs complain at me –
AOL 6 for one, decided that I was using the wrong version, and
needed the XP version. That was fine, I downloaded, installed, and
everything’s as smooth as a baby’s botty – but not until I’d
spent a good half hour running the old version first – and I do
know of folks who just ignore the pop-up warning and carry on
regardless.
A couple of other programs decided not to run
correctly, and crashed. The good news is that they didn’t take the
whole system with them (they used to when they died under Win 98 and
Win Me) and let me keep on keeping on.
I rather like the fade-in and out menus, the whole
system seems, as I said, a lot faster, multiple logon personalities
are a doddle to set up, and every bit of MS software I run seems to
be behaving rather better than if did before. The system seems a
whole lot more stable than Me was (not a particularly hard trick to
perform, admittedly), and I reckon it’s been a worthwhile
exercise.
However… I think I shall be investing in a new
hard disk for this machine, which will become the default boot disk,
and I think I’ll be installing XP on it from scratch, rather than
as an upgrade. Somewhere deep in the back of my mind, I still
don’t trust an upgrade install.!
Read Dave Cook's in-depth
series of reviews of XP
David Dorn
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