![]() I format and install Vista onto the smallest of the three and everything installs great. I take my Windows XP partition, along with the 15 other partitions that I foolishly made (to keep partition sizes down, which I honestly do not care much about anymore), delete all of them, and create 3 new partitions from within the Vista install program. I proceed to jump right into Vista 圆4 (the 64 bit version). So I get my copy of Vista Ultimate the other day, mostly because I am technical enough to troubleshoot the problems, the first DirectX 10 games are coming out soon, and I like eye candy. This makes for a huge inconvenience that in the end is completely retarded because there is a “workaround” that nullifies the whole process. It actually checks for a previous operating system for an upgrade key. In Vista, as far as I can tell, this is not possible. In previous versions of Windows when you purchased the Upgrade version of the new operating system you could always just insert the CD of the previous version during the install to verify that you indeed had a previous version and were eligible for the upgrade version. An alternate title for this post could be “How I managed to memorize my Vista key in one day.”
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