The (not so easy) way to install Windows 7.
Oh, the joys of older hardware.
I’ve been running Windows 7 since the beta came out and installed it without issue on a number of my work machines, but when it came time to do the install on my primary home computer things got a little dicey. It had nothing to do with Windows 7, mind you, but rather my aging Pentium 4 system. My machine didn’t even have a DVD drive. I know, that’s kind of crazy for 2009, but I just honestly never had a bona fide need for one in that particular machine. Windows 7 (on DVD) became the reason. With my DVD burner I was all ready to install Windows 7! I threw in the DVD and nothing happened. I hopped into the BIOS only to be presented with more puzzlement: my hard drive was the only listed boot device. It turns out that my motherboard doesn’t know how to boot from a SATA optical device although it works fine once Windows is loaded. Undeterred I grabbed a spare hard drive and a spare PATA DVD drive I had sitting around. I figured out I had another issue since Partition Logic and Gparted were both unable to interface with the SIS chipset on my ASUS motherboard leaving me unable to create a partition on which to install Windows 7. Are you following me? Ok, good. With the spare PATA hard drive and DVD I got to work getting Windows 7 installed. Once it was installed on the spare drive I was able to view my primary drive, the one I wanted to resize and repartition all along. I created a new partition alongside Windows XP, disconnected the spare hard drive, and ran a second install of Windows 7 on the newly created partition. Voila, I now had Windows 7 and Windows XP both running on my 500GB SATA drive. My goal is to eventually get almost everything off of my Windows XP partition so that I can shrink it down to something small like 20GB. This is going to take some time, though, since I have to keep shrinking and extending each respective partition as I move things from XP to 7. Hopefully your installation of Windows 7 was a little less painful than mine.