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	<title>The Dumping Ground &#187; install</title>
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	<description>And who cares?</description>
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		<title>Chronicles of Windows 7 Part 3: From Release Candidate to Final Version</title>
		<link>http://ardvaark.net/chronicles-of-windows-7-part-3-from-release-candidate-to-final-version</link>
		<comments>http://ardvaark.net/chronicles-of-windows-7-part-3-from-release-candidate-to-final-version#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 31 Oct 2009 17:37:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brian</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[install]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[upgrade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[windows 7]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I was running the Windows 7 Release Candidate for many months prior to the October 22 public release.&#160; I had pre-ordered the new version, and it conveniently arrived on the release day.&#160; Anxious to see what was changed, I promptly set about upgrading. Unfortunately, there is no easy upgrade path from the RC.&#160; The process [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I was running the Windows 7 Release Candidate for many months prior to the October 22 public release.&#160; I had pre-ordered the new version, and it conveniently arrived on the release day.&#160; Anxious to see what was changed, I promptly set about upgrading.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, there is no easy upgrade path from the RC.&#160; The process forces a complete re-install (although there are some <a title="How-To Geek: How to Upgrade the Windows 7 RC to RTM (Final Release)" href="http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/3075/how-to-upgrade-the-windows-7-rc-to-rtm/">work-arounds</a>).&#160; I’m okay with that, though, since I had beat my RC install to a pulp experimenting with different drivers and hacks to get my <a title="The Dumping Ground: Chronicles of Windows 7 Part 1: Qualcomm Gobi 3G Modem and VMWare NAT" href="http://ardvaark.net/chronicles-of-windows-7-part-1-qualcomm-gobi-3g-modem-and-vmware-nat">Qualcomm Gobi 3G card working</a>.&#160; (I never really did.)</p>
<h3>My Upgrade Process</h3>
<p>The upgrade process I took was simple: Plug in my external hard drive, back up my machine using Windows Backup – including a system image – and then wipe the drive and start from scratch.&#160; I had used similar processes in the past, although usually using a Linux Live CD and dd.&#160; However, the Windows 7 Backup creates system images in a VHD format, and Windows 7 can also mount VHD images natively, making this a much simpler solution.&#160; Also, it neatly sidestepped any issues I might have had with my encrypted Bit Locker hard drive.</p>
<p>I’m pleased to report that the re-install process was a cakewalk, and the recovery of my data was virtually flawless.&#160; The only hiccups were caused by my own stupidly.&#160; I limited the files I had backed up in order to speed up the process, and found out later I wanted them.&#160; Fortunately, they were still on the system image, and the VHD mount worked as-expected.</p>
<p>Though my technique may not be for everyone, it works for the tech-savvy control-freak like me.</p>
<h3>Stuff That’s Fixed</h3>
<p>The good news is that HP’s new drivers for the Qualcomm Gobi 3G modem work flawlessly in the final version of Windows 7.&#160; Hopefully they’ll eventually switch to use the new broadband driver stack built in to the new OS, but I’m not holding my breath.&#160; They do work, though, and that’s enough.</p>
<p>The VMWare NAT issue was actually cleared up by an update to VMWare while I was still running the RC.&#160; I am mentioning it here to close the loop on the earlier post.</p>
<p>And that’s it, really.&#160; It’s not that there aren’t any more fixes, but that the RC was so solid for me that I had no gripes worth mentioning.&#160; For those who suffered through Vista’s growing pains, this is a huge step up for Microsoft.&#160; I suspect the large beta program and massive release candidate program helped immensely in this area.</p>
<h3>Wish List</h3>
<p>Here is my one gripe: Windows sizes the desktop background based on which monitor is designated as your “Primary”.&#160; I dual monitor using my wide screen laptop display and a 4:3 stand-alone monitor, and I prefer the stand-alone screen as my primary.&#160; Thus, I often get stupid black bars surrounding the background on my laptop display, because the image has been sized for the non-wide screen.</p>
<p>I am hard-pressed to think of a situation where this makes sense.&#160; Hopefully Microsoft will make the “Fill” desktop background option actually fill on differently sized screens.&#160; But in the meantime, this is a minor, minor thing.</p>
<p>And it should tell you something that such a ridiculously minor thing is all that I can find to complain about.</p>
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