1. This forum is in read-only mode.

XP on a Vista PC help

Discussion in 'Non-Emulation Help' started by someirishkid, Apr 15, 2012.

  1. someirishkid

    someirishkid Well-Known Member

    Here are my specs (It's a laptop by the way):

    Acer Extensa 5230E
    2.16GHz Genuine Intel CPU
    3 GB RAM
    160 GB hard drive
    Vista Home Basic SP2 (32-bit)

    I was just wondering, which of the following would be the best way to run XP on this laptop?

    1) Get a virtual machine and install and run XP there

    2) Wipe Vista and do a clean install of XP

    3) Install XP in a separate partition/hard drive and dual boot

    Or is there another option I don't know about?
     
  2. Loonylion

    Loonylion Administrator Staff Member

    virtual machine is the easiest by far, but best depends on what you want XP for.
     
  3. someirishkid

    someirishkid Well-Known Member

    I want it to play old PC games that have problems working with Vista.
     
  4. Loonylion

    Loonylion Administrator Staff Member

    then a VM is probably not the best way because they generally only have very basic graphics support.

    but installing XP on a machine designed for vista/7 isnt necessarily straightforward due to driver support. If you can find XP drivers for all (or all of the important) devices in the computer, then you can install XP on it natively (remember that XP does not support SATA without drivers, so you need XP drivers for the SATA controller slipstreamed into the XP install CD. Alternatively you might be able to set the SATA controller to operate in IDE or legacy mode).
     
  5. someirishkid

    someirishkid Well-Known Member

    I see... well thanks for that, I'll look into it. and thanks for responding so fast :)
     
  6. asdfth12

    asdfth12 Well-Known Member

    My old machine was Vista and used SATA drives. I used a XP install disk that I got in 06 for the XP install and their were no issues with the SATA controller. Had to get the drivers for my vid and sound card, but that was it.

    Only thing is to make sure that you get a 64 bit version of XP.
     
  7. Loonylion

    Loonylion Administrator Staff Member

    don't touch xp64, it's utter trash and probably won't work.

    as for the SATA, either your SATA controller is in legacy mode or you struck lucky and have one of the very few SATA controllers that later builds of XP have built in drivers for.
     
  8. asdfth12

    asdfth12 Well-Known Member

    He says the laptop is 3 gb ram. 32 bit can only access 2 gb if I remember right.
     
  9. Loonylion

    Loonylion Administrator Staff Member

    no, 32bit can only access 4GB. 2GB is the per-process limit.