Treated myself to a windows 7 prof the other day. As it is an OEM disk it must be clean installed. No formatting your old disk to clear off the disks. What is it that is retained on the hard drive after a format, and how do you shift it.
Treated myself to a windows 7 prof the other day. As it is an OEM disk it must be clean installed. No formatting your old disk to clear off the disks. What is it that is retained on the hard drive after a format, and how do you shift it.
So nothing is retained unless you start looking at sectors on the drive itself.
Obviously neither of you have any experience with OEM disks
Obviously neither of you have any experience with OEM disks
Obviously neither of you have any experience with OEM disks
I have OEM versions of every Microsoft OS since they started OEMing them!
i think ive still got 3.11 on about 50 floppy disks somewhere..
i wonder if the OP has read the EULA on the OEM?
Treated myself to a windows 7 prof the other day. As it is an OEM disk it must be clean installed. No formatting your old disk to clear off the disks. What is it that is retained on the hard drive after a format, and how do you shift it.
0000000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000000000
0000000000000000000000000
and so on

i wonder if the OP has read the EULA on the OEM?
Which is about what I was I was thinking as i read down the thread.
Which is about what I was I was thinking as i read down the thread.
A guy that works for me has an old machine that the HD had failed on ages ago and a few weeks ago his wife had the idea of installing Windows 95 to run a load of legacy games for the kids [I actually think it was for her] that just will not work on Xp or later - do you know I had to go googling to remember how to do it!![]()
Then having a go at two people who could help him in their sleep was rather silly. Anyway I am sure he will work it out himself eventually.
and im normally mostly asleep until about lunchtime..
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Scan forced you to buy hardware to get a copy of oem windows? I've never had that problem.
and I was making PCs when you had a separate floppy disc card and serial/parallel board and processors with numbers like 8086 ! When you actually repaired faulty boards with a soldering iron, scope and meter rather than throwing them away
I have OEM versions of every Microsoft OS since they started OEMing them!
Ahhh!!!!!!!! those was the days, I remember them well I still got a soldering iron...Ahhh!!!!!!!! those was the days, I remember them well I still got a soldering iron...
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I still do repairs like that. Not too long ago I got 3 BBC computers that were fault and built 2 working ones after removing all the soldered in RAM from one and soldering it into sockets in the faulty one. Yes back then you had to know what you are doingNow they just replace things till it works, it's not quite the same
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I still do repairs like that. Not too long ago I got 3 BBC computers that were fault and built 2 working ones after removing all the soldered in RAM from one and soldering it into sockets in the faulty one. Yes back then you had to know what you are doingNow they just replace things till it works, it's not quite the same
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i think ive still got 3.11 on about 50 floppy disks somewhere..
and a new card installation usually required a backplane rewire That was a massive technology leap - a self booting OS- i was still wandering around with 1/2 inch tapes to install operating systems on systems where you had to load the bootstrap manually using 32 toggle switch's on the front panel of the system
and a new card installation usually required a backplane rewire
, and you didn't replace a hard disk drive you changed the platters and the heads in the drive on-site then spent hours (overtime
) re-aligning the heads to the removable packs.
That was a massive technology leap - a self booting OS- i was still wandering around with 1/2 inch tapes to install operating systems on systems where you had to load the bootstrap manually using 32 toggle switch's on the front panel of the system
and a new card installation usually required a backplane rewire
, and you didn't replace a hard disk drive you changed the platters and the heads in the drive on-site then spent hours (overtime
) re-aligning the heads to the removable packs.
hehe excellent
how old are you?![]()
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cheeky b****r not that old - i Started my apprenticeship in 1984 working on Dec (Digital) PDP / Vax systems and Data General Eclispe / MV systems , and i remember the first Dec course i went on was just for the backplane and it was a 4 week residential course
. I still no of some PDP 11/34 and 11/84 systems that are still running today - due to the specialized functions they perform.
Hee Hee Hee Hee
I have never been so amused. All these White Bankers trying to outsmart each other. I go back to the repair of ABACUS frames. Didn`t need a soldering iron though.
cheeky b****r not that old - i Started my apprenticeship in 1984 working on Dec (Digital) PDP / Vax systems and Data General Eclispe / MV systems , and i remember the first Dec course i went on was just for the backplane and it was a 4 week residential course
. I still no of some PDP 11/34 and 11/84 systems that are still running today - due to the specialized functions they perform.
We gathered that as you cant work out how to install windows - then ****ed on any cance of getting any help on here![]()