Can a Dell XPS T 700 be reformatted or is it proprietary?
adarryl
No Man Stands So Tall As When He Stoops To Help a Child. Icrontian
I just received a request for help from a co-worker and I am not sure how to advise him. Here is what he sent: "An aide at work has an older Dell computer that she wants to give to a relative. Everything works, but the husband did not want the hard drive to be passed on to anyone due to security issues (credit card, social security numbers, etc). So they bought a new hard drive and physically put it in.
Now for the problem (if you haven't guessed). They do not have the original disk(s) that came with the computer to load the Windows system. They believe it was Windows 98 (a sticker on the front of the computer says it was built to handle NT and 98.
When I start it up I ,of course, get the prompt "No operating system found". Putting a windows 95 start up floppy from a laptop into the system, and a Windows 95 CD in, I am able to get to the point of installing 95. However, I did not proceed because I am hesitant as I don't want to mess any thing up. I don't have any plain Windows 98 CDs, but I do have a Windows 98 upgrade (from 95) CD.
Going to the Dell site, there are about 90 driver downloads available for this particular computer, depending on which items are physically present.
What would you suggest I do to help this gal? Can I just go ahead with the 95 installation, and then upgrade to the 98? Or is this too complicated? Do I need a disk that is proprietary to this computer?"
Please advise on best course of action and I will pass it on. It should be obvious that this PC is not cutting edge, but would a Windows install for this older model be proprietary or could a Win95 --->Win98 be done? How about a flat out Win2K install? I could supply him with that! THX!
Now for the problem (if you haven't guessed). They do not have the original disk(s) that came with the computer to load the Windows system. They believe it was Windows 98 (a sticker on the front of the computer says it was built to handle NT and 98.
When I start it up I ,of course, get the prompt "No operating system found". Putting a windows 95 start up floppy from a laptop into the system, and a Windows 95 CD in, I am able to get to the point of installing 95. However, I did not proceed because I am hesitant as I don't want to mess any thing up. I don't have any plain Windows 98 CDs, but I do have a Windows 98 upgrade (from 95) CD.
Going to the Dell site, there are about 90 driver downloads available for this particular computer, depending on which items are physically present.
What would you suggest I do to help this gal? Can I just go ahead with the 95 installation, and then upgrade to the 98? Or is this too complicated? Do I need a disk that is proprietary to this computer?"
Please advise on best course of action and I will pass it on. It should be obvious that this PC is not cutting edge, but would a Windows install for this older model be proprietary or could a Win95 --->Win98 be done? How about a flat out Win2K install? I could supply him with that! THX!
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Comments
I'd suggest Win2k, but the driver hunting would be even harder because dell doesn't provide them.
If you have to go Microsoft, I would recommend 2000 or even XP if you upgrade the ram to a minimum of 512 mb. I try to strictly stay away from Win9x nowdays as it's just too unstable for me and it is also an EOL product with no security updates.
Opinions? Anyone? THX!
As far as hardware drivers are concerned. There shouldn't be any issues. But it's easy enough to find out. Just boot the machine up with a live linux cd and see what works. You could also use that to show her what she'd be getting into with linux and see if that's something she can live with.
I wouldn't market linux to her as it's kinda like windows - but etc...etc...etc... It's a different OS all together along with it's own strengths and weaknesses the same as if she bought a Mac. Linux is not a free windows alternative. It's a different beast and should be treated as such.
What you do have to understand is that linux isn't windows so if you want to install simple software on it you can't just download anything. You have to install linux software, the same as a mac user needs mac software and a windows user is limited to windows software.
It's not hard to use, it's just different.