Chronicle Of A Windows XP To Windows 7 Upgrade (Part 2)

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Windows XP To Windows 7 Upgrade (Part 2)

Hello everyone,

In part 2, I would like to take you through my exact steps in the post-installation process. I hope this helps someone - if anyone does anything radically different please let me know.

Once the new OS has been installed successfully you are not through - in fact the most important part is yet to come. You must now reinstall your clients precious data, programs, emails, contacts, drivers and more. What good is a new OS installation if you loose all or some of your clients data in the process? Believe me they will not be happy, word will get around, and your reputation as a computer technician will suffer greatly.

After Windows 7 Successfully Installed:

8) Installed Windows Live Essentials (you cannot run Outlook Express in Windows 7 so I switched my client to Windows Live Mail. I then went into windows.old folder (Local Settings > Identities, and imported the actual email (originally from Windows XP) into Windows Live Mail.

9) Configured The Incoming And Outgoing Mail Servers (must know Internet Service Provider and then setup the POP3 incoming and SMTP outgoing mail servers. You will need your clients email address and password to do this. Many times the client will say that they don't have a password but yes they do - if they can't find it you will have to call the ISP and get it from them.

10) Import The EMail Address Book (these are the contacts that used to be in Outlook Express. In the windows.old folder, go to Applications > Documents and Settings > Microsoft > Address Book (it's a Windows Address Book file of type .wab). Import this address book into Windows Live Mail (they will now be called contacts). If your client is using Outlook you should backup the Outlook .pst file which includes messages and contacts (Apps > Microsoft Outlook), before you even begin to install the new OS.

11) Copy & Paste Desktop, Start Menu And My Documents Into Windows 7 (open up these folders from windows.old and copy & paste the contents of each into the folder by the same name in Windows 7. Your client will now see the same Desktop and Start Menu as before (in XP) and you also will remember how things looked before the new OS install! Windows 7 will neatly place the contents from the XP My Documents folder into six folders ( My Documents, My Pictures, My Video, My Music, Desktop, Local).

12) Install Antivirus Program (I installed Microsoft Security Essentials).

13) Reinstall Printer Software And Drivers (my clients printer was the HP Office Jet 6210 - no drivers were needed - Windows 7 already had all of the necessary drivers).

14) Reinstall Office Software (my client was using Microsoft Office 2003).

15) Download Any Programs That Didn't Make The New Install (some older programs if they are not registry dependent will make it over to the new OS (for example Hoyle Card Games). I reinstalled the following programs: Picasa, Ashampoo WinOptimizer 6, InterVideo Win DVD, Malwarebytes, Sony Connect (SonicStage) software for MP3 player.

16) Done!! (the entire process [part1 & part 2] - a little over 4 hours!!

The Tech Professor
 
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8) Installed Windows Live Essentials (you cannot run Outlook Express in Windows 7 so I switched my client to Windows Live Mail. I then went into windows.old folder (Local Settings > Identities, and imported the actual email (originally from Windows XP) into Windows Live Mail.


I decided to experiment with Windows Live Mail on my XP box, in an attempt to move to it from Outlook Express and...wow, did it MANGLE the import of the old mail!

It attempted to sort stuff all over the place, put email in wrong categories, just botched the whole thing. For now, I'm sticking with OE.

What I may go back and do is wipe all data from Windows Live Mail, recreate the settings from OE, and forgetaboutit! Just refer back to OE when needed. Or not. ;)
 
Hello iladelf,

I'm sure that you have tried this but I thought I'd post it just in case. Best wishes!


To import e‑mail:

1) Open Windows Live Mail by clicking the Start button Picture of the Start button. In the search box, type Windows Live Mail, and then, in the list of results, click Windows Live Mail.

2) Click the File menu, and then point to Import.

3) Click Messages, and then choose the e‑mail program from which you want to import e‑mail messages.

4) Click Next, and then follow the on-screen instructions. Your imported messages will appear in the folder list under Storage folders.

To import contacts:

1) Open Windows Live Mail by clicking the Start button Picture of the Start button. In the search box, type Windows Live Mail, and then, in the list of results, click Windows Live Mail.

2) In the lower-left corner of the Windows Live Mail window, click Contacts.

3) Click the File menu, point to Import, and then click the type of address book that you want to import.

If prompted, browse to the file that contains the contact information that you want to import, click it, and then click Open.

The Tech Professor
 
15) Download Any Programs That Didn't Make The New Install (some older programs if they are not registry dependent will make it over to the new OS (for example Hoyle Card Games). I reinstalled the following programs: Picasa, Ashampoo WinOptimizer 6, InterVideo Win DVD, Malwarebytes, Sony Connect (SonicStage) software for MP3 player.

Make sure you also double-check your installations to non-admin users, some programs don't always install to every account.
 
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