sorcerer
Active Member
- Reaction score
- 77
- Location
- Preston, Lancs, UK
Brand new desktop with a Gigabyte mobo (sorry, can't remember which one), Intel Pentium Dual Core G3240, 4GB RAM and 1TB drive, running Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 (x86)
OS and all updates installed perfectly, as did all mobo drivers, things like Adobe Reader, Flash; all drivers and supplementary programs for a Canon printer and also a Brother printer, and some other stuff too. In other words, it's all working well and everything has installed exactly as it should - until I came to install MS Office 2010 Professional Plus (think it's Student Edition if that makes any difference although I don't think it should), when I get this on screen:
It is running a genuine, authenticated 32-bit edition of Windows 7 Home Premium but it's SP1 version. Surely the error message can't mean that it wants the older, pre-SP1 version, so what does it mean and how can I get round this? Oh, should also say that I've tried installing in Safe Mode but same thing happens.
OS and all updates installed perfectly, as did all mobo drivers, things like Adobe Reader, Flash; all drivers and supplementary programs for a Canon printer and also a Brother printer, and some other stuff too. In other words, it's all working well and everything has installed exactly as it should - until I came to install MS Office 2010 Professional Plus (think it's Student Edition if that makes any difference although I don't think it should), when I get this on screen:
It is running a genuine, authenticated 32-bit edition of Windows 7 Home Premium but it's SP1 version. Surely the error message can't mean that it wants the older, pre-SP1 version, so what does it mean and how can I get round this? Oh, should also say that I've tried installing in Safe Mode but same thing happens.