Technology Windows XP Download

_carmi

me, myself & us
#1
I need to know where I could find Windows XP. I know there are a bunch of links everywhere, it's just I need to reinstall it on one of my computers and I do not have the XP cd to install it.

Basically that computer has viruses and I wanna basically reset it, give it a fresh new start.

Anyone can help me? I'm sure there are one or two of you guys that can help me. Thanks in advance.
 

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#2
So you want to format your hard drive right?
If you see many links to download then download from any that has a good feedback.
 

Prize Gotti

Boots N Cats
Staff member
#3
Be careful, if you get a recent version of it, you have to authenticate within 30 days or you PC will lock down. Unless you patch it, but then it can get complicated.
 

Jeremy

Well-Known Member
#6
Boot from cd. select the new install option. When you get to the partition screen you wanna delete the old one and then create a new one. Then you wanna format it with the ntsf option. After that it will format reboot and then begin the xp install. It's as simple as following the steps after that.
 

Prize Gotti

Boots N Cats
Staff member
#11
there shouldnt be an iso file, either an exe or msi. iso basically a disc dump and you cant open it like a normal file. if it was an iso, the you would have to mount a virtual drive and i dont think is easy at all from dos.

if you did not read earlier, look for this;



if you see it, it means your PC will not boot windows if you do not authenticate in 30 days or patch it.
 

Preach

Well-Known Member
#12
lol. i can talk you through this.

An ISO is a mirror of a CD or DVD. Every respectable burning application can burn ISO files. I use dvdSanta which is free and googlable. There is one thing you need to be aware of, that I haven't tried doing with dvdSanta. I have used Nero, though. You open up Nero and look through the New Project Wizard and/or the File/Edit/Tools/etc menus. Look for anything that lets you burn a CD from an ISO file. It should say "Burn from ISO..." or something in the menu, and clicking it should open a dialog box where you can browse your PC for the ISO file you want to use. Just make sure that you make a bootable CD. Again, this shouldn't be very difficult in Nero. In the New Project Wizard you should be able to choose if you are making a data disc, a music disc, a video disc, a bootable disc, etc. If there are two different ones, choose the first one in the ascending order.

When the CD is ready, put it in and reboot your computer. Before Windows starts booting up, the CD should either boot automatically, or text should appear telling you to press any button to boot the CD. If you don't press a button, your PC will neglect the CD and boot Windows from the harddrive anyway. If the CD doesn't boot, and you don't see the aforementioned text, you need to enter your BIOS and change a simple setting. The first screen you see when you start your PC should tell you your amount of RAM, what IDE or SATA devices are connected to your PC, what prosessor you have. Alternatively, a manufacturer logo. Look if it says "Press DEL to enter setup", "Press F2 to enter setup", or whatever it asks you to press to enter setup. In the setup interface, look for the screen that lets you change the boot priority. Choose your CD-ROM as your primary or first boot device, your hard drive as the secondary boot device. Save and exit and reboot again. This time your PC should notify you that there is a bootable CD in your disc drive, and ask you if you want to boot from it. You obviously do :)

XP setup starts. You are asked whether you want to repair the current installation or install a fresh installation. You don't want to repair. When you choose to install Windows and accept the liscense agreement, you are to pick the harddrive to install it to. If you have one physical hard drive in your computer, but a C:\ and a D:\ in your "My Computer", you have partitions. Maybe you know what they are, I'm not insinuating, but you want to delete the entire C:\ partition. This will create unallocated space on your hard drive. Format this unallocated space and your partition is ready. I don't remember which order these things happen in, but I think you choose the hard drive to install to and accept. Then, on the next screen, you are asked if you want to format the partition before installing or not. Either way, you get the picture of what you need to do.

After that it should all be down-hill. Don't listen to Gotti :p You don't need to mount the ISO file in DOS. If I missed a detail and you don't have a burner, I'm sure you have a friend with one. You must at least have a USB stick or some form of portable storage device of more than 1GB to bring the ISO to your friend.
 

Prize Gotti

Boots N Cats
Staff member
#13
lol. i can talk you through this.

An ISO is a mirror of a CD or DVD. Every respectable burning application can burn ISO files. I use dvdSanta which is free and googlable. There is one thing you need to be aware of, that I haven't tried doing with dvdSanta. I have used Nero, though. You open up Nero and look through the New Project Wizard and/or the File/Edit/Tools/etc menus. Look for anything that lets you burn a CD from an ISO file. It should say "Burn from ISO..." or something in the menu, and clicking it should open a dialog box where you can browse your PC for the ISO file you want to use. Just make sure that you make a bootable CD. Again, this shouldn't be very difficult in Nero. In the New Project Wizard you should be able to choose if you are making a data disc, a music disc, a video disc, a bootable disc, etc. If there are two different ones, choose the first one in the ascending order.

When the CD is ready, put it in and reboot your computer. Before Windows starts booting up, the CD should either boot automatically, or text should appear telling you to press any button to boot the CD. If you don't press a button, your PC will neglect the CD and boot Windows from the harddrive anyway. If the CD doesn't boot, and you don't see the aforementioned text, you need to enter your BIOS and change a simple setting. The first screen you see when you start your PC should tell you your amount of RAM, what IDE or SATA devices are connected to your PC, what prosessor you have. Alternatively, a manufacturer logo. Look if it says "Press DEL to enter setup", "Press F2 to enter setup", or whatever it asks you to press to enter setup. In the setup interface, look for the screen that lets you change the boot priority. Choose your CD-ROM as your primary or first boot device, your hard drive as the secondary boot device. Save and exit and reboot again. This time your PC should notify you that there is a bootable CD in your disc drive, and ask you if you want to boot from it. You obviously do :)

XP setup starts. You are asked whether you want to repair the current installation or install a fresh installation. You don't want to repair. When you choose to install Windows and accept the liscense agreement, you are to pick the harddrive to install it to. If you have one physical hard drive in your computer, but a C:\ and a D:\ in your "My Computer", you have partitions. Maybe you know what they are, I'm not insinuating, but you want to delete the entire C:\ partition. This will create unallocated space on your hard drive. Format this unallocated space and your partition is ready. I don't remember which order these things happen in, but I think you choose the hard drive to install to and accept. Then, on the next screen, you are asked if you want to format the partition before installing or not. Either way, you get the picture of what you need to do.

After that it should all be down-hill. Don't listen to Gotti :p You don't need to mount the ISO file in DOS. If I missed a detail and you don't have a burner, I'm sure you have a friend with one. You must at least have a USB stick or some form of portable storage device of more than 1GB to bring the ISO to your friend.
Yeah, I didn't want to complicate shit for her by having to do all that.
 

_carmi

me, myself & us
#14
lol. i can talk you through this.

An ISO is a mirror of a CD or DVD. Every respectable burning application can burn ISO files. I use dvdSanta which is free and googlable. There is one thing you need to be aware of, that I haven't tried doing with dvdSanta. I have used Nero, though. You open up Nero and look through the New Project Wizard and/or the File/Edit/Tools/etc menus. Look for anything that lets you burn a CD from an ISO file. It should say "Burn from ISO..." or something in the menu, and clicking it should open a dialog box where you can browse your PC for the ISO file you want to use. Just make sure that you make a bootable CD. Again, this shouldn't be very difficult in Nero. In the New Project Wizard you should be able to choose if you are making a data disc, a music disc, a video disc, a bootable disc, etc. If there are two different ones, choose the first one in the ascending order.

When the CD is ready, put it in and reboot your computer. Before Windows starts booting up, the CD should either boot automatically, or text should appear telling you to press any button to boot the CD. If you don't press a button, your PC will neglect the CD and boot Windows from the harddrive anyway. If the CD doesn't boot, and you don't see the aforementioned text, you need to enter your BIOS and change a simple setting. The first screen you see when you start your PC should tell you your amount of RAM, what IDE or SATA devices are connected to your PC, what prosessor you have. Alternatively, a manufacturer logo. Look if it says "Press DEL to enter setup", "Press F2 to enter setup", or whatever it asks you to press to enter setup. In the setup interface, look for the screen that lets you change the boot priority. Choose your CD-ROM as your primary or first boot device, your hard drive as the secondary boot device. Save and exit and reboot again. This time your PC should notify you that there is a bootable CD in your disc drive, and ask you if you want to boot from it. You obviously do :)

XP setup starts. You are asked whether you want to repair the current installation or install a fresh installation. You don't want to repair. When you choose to install Windows and accept the liscense agreement, you are to pick the harddrive to install it to. If you have one physical hard drive in your computer, but a C:\ and a D:\ in your "My Computer", you have partitions. Maybe you know what they are, I'm not insinuating, but you want to delete the entire C:\ partition. This will create unallocated space on your hard drive. Format this unallocated space and your partition is ready. I don't remember which order these things happen in, but I think you choose the hard drive to install to and accept. Then, on the next screen, you are asked if you want to format the partition before installing or not. Either way, you get the picture of what you need to do.

After that it should all be down-hill. Don't listen to Gotti :p You don't need to mount the ISO file in DOS. If I missed a detail and you don't have a burner, I'm sure you have a friend with one. You must at least have a USB stick or some form of portable storage device of more than 1GB to bring the ISO to your friend.
thanks a lot :)

i'm downloading nero right now though cause i didn't have it. (used to have it, deleted it by mistake)
 

_carmi

me, myself & us
#15
okay so i created a cd iso but i'm not sure if its bootable lol...

basically i chose nero burn rom and burned an iso cd...


wsit: reading this http://ftp6.nero.com/user_guides/nero8/burningrom/NeroBurningRom_Enu.pdf

4. If the template data for the bootable disc should originate from an image file:
1. Select the Image file option button in the Source of boot image data area.
2. Click on the Browse button and select the desired image file.
3. Select the language that should appear while the system is booting from the Boot locale
drop-down menu.
4. Check the Enable expert features box and select the emulation type for the image file
from the Emulation type drop-down menu.
what is template data and when i clicked on source it asked for a .ima file. do i need a specific file or the one they provide with nero is fine? (C:\Program Files\Nero\Nero8\Nero Burning Rom\DosBootimage.IMA)

9.3 Creating and Burning a Bootable Disc
To create a bootable disc, proceed as follows:
1. Click on the New button in the main Nero Burning ROM screen.
The New Compilation window is opened.
2. If you want to create a bootable CD, select the entry CD from the combo box and the entry
CD-ROM (Boot) from the list box. If you want to create a bootable DVD, select the entry
DVD from the combo box and the entry DVD-ROM (Boot) from the list box.
The tabs for the bootable disc are displayed; the Boot tab is in front.
3. If the template data for the bootable disc should originate from a logical drive:
1. Select the Bootable logical drive option button in the Source of boot image data area.
2. Select the entry you want from the drop-down menu.
If the logical drive you want does not appear in the drop-down menu, the reason for this is
that the drive is bigger than the space available on the disc. Please note that for operating
systems as of Microsoft® Windows® 2000 you need to have administrator rights in order to
be able to access drives directly, which you will need to do if you are to create bootable
discs.
4. If the template data for the bootable disc should originate from an image file:
1. Select the Image file option button in the Source of boot image data area.
2. Click on the Browse button and select the desired image file.
3. Select the language that should appear while the system is booting from the Boot locale
drop-down menu.
4. Check the Enable expert features box and select the emulation type for the image file
from the Emulation type drop-down menu.
5. Select any other options required on the tabs (see New Compilation Window).
6. Click on the New button.
The selection screen is displayed.
7. Select the files/folders that should be written to the ISO part of the bootable disc and drag
them into the compilation area.
The files/folders are displayed in the compilation area and the capacity bar indicates how
much storage space is required on the disc.
You have now created the bootable disc and can start the burn process (see Starting
the Burn Process).
 

Preach

Well-Known Member
#16
DosBootimage should be okay, yes. I'll admit, it's a long time since I made a bootable CD-R, but worst case scenario you waste a CD-R. I'll refund you the $0,25 through PayPal if you insist :-p But my intuition tells me this is exactly the one you want to use.
 

The.Menace

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#18
hm. that indeed is susbicious. I agree with the rest the boys said.

(2 check if your windows cd is bootable, just put it in the cd driver and restart. if it doesn't work, you might have to go 2 your bios (usually by pressing F2 or F8 or F12 or something, it's written there for a short while) and activate the cd driver for start up - so that he checks it first for a OS before he tries the hard driver. Anyway, you should do that after we discussed that potential virus problem)
 

Jeremy

Well-Known Member
#20
Yeah, I wouldn't use that one, Carmi. All you have to do is burn it as a .iso and it will be a bootable cd. I've done it a hundred times. I just use one of the free iso programs on downloads.com
 

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