malada: Greenland flag (Default)
malada ([personal profile] malada) wrote2017-12-09 07:04 pm
Entry tags:

Argh. Windows.

Several months back, I rescued a computer from the garbage. It's an older HP Pavilion that had a broken hard drive. It had Win7 home premium on it. Using an Ubuntu boot USB stick I could see the contents of the drive but it won't boot to Windows. I couldn't fix the drive so I bought a cheap one - 320 gigs for about 20 bucks to replace it.

I did not snoop into the contents of the old drive - just enough to get the idea that repair programs had been recently installed and failed. That's right... the disk wasn't wiped. I wiped it.

I also added another 4 gig of ram and a cheap Nvidia card... along with a newer power supply because HP sticks in wimpy power supplies for their desktops... and installed Xubuntu. Software install time... about an hour and a half.

I got bored with it and installed Ubuntu Studio and used it with my cheap MIDI setup. Software install time... about an hour and a half. But you know... I still had the activation code posted on the computer box. I've tried installing Windows 7 with ...er... sketchy activation codes... and Microsoft reached out and said, "Uh, uh, uh... you didn't say the magic word." They didn't disable the computer - they just changed the screen to note that it wasn't an Official Version. And no, you can't change the screen.

Now, I'm a Linux Grrl and all... but sometimes you just need Windows. *#&*%. So I checked HP's web site and found I could buy replacement media. For 45 dollars... I'll take the chance.

I took out the Nvidia card as to not confuse the software and ran the install. It took about 2 and a half hours. I haven't fully checked it out but it looks like all the drivers got installed and everything.

But now, 2 hours later... I'm still installing Windows 7 updates. It's not quite halfway through. I'll probably leave it on overnight.

So with just about any Linux distribution you'd be up and running with a fully installed and upgraded system - complete with web browsers, media players and an office suite in less than two hours. I *think* I have an office suite installed - but little else except trialware - which are probably out of date.

So even after I have all the updates installed it'll be needing a clean up. I've already installed Firefox and CCleaner. It comes with Nortons but I haven't activated it yet. I wanted to get the updates installed first.

Then I scrub the trialware and other garbage. A moderately good graphics card would really make this old machine 'talk'. I could put in a faster processor... but I'm not going to spend the money. I might not keep this machine but gift it to someone who needs a Windows 7 machine.

But sheeesh... this is taking a long time.

-m
siliconshaman: black cat against the moon (Default)

[personal profile] siliconshaman 2017-12-10 05:22 am (UTC)(link)
Apparently the latest version of Mint has a windows virtual machine that comes as standard, allows you to use windows software alongside linux.

Get this though, on an older and from hardware standpoint, slower machine, installing and booting windows 7 takes less time on the linux virtual machine, than it does on an actual windows 7 box, despite the hardware being better...

I don't know what the hell windows is doing... but when it's running the hardware, it does it slower..