The Windows Vista Upgrade Advisor beta will help you determine if your current PC is ready for an upgrade to Windows Vista. It will also help you to choose the edition of Windows Vista that's right for you. Download the Upgrade Advisor beta and run an analysis of your current PC and use the detailed feedback to ensure that your PC is ready for the edition of Windows Vista that you want.
*** NOTE:
Q. Why is the Windows Vista Upgrade Advisor beta only available for Windows XP users?
A. The Windows Vista Upgrade Advisor beta depends on technology that only runs on computers with editions of Windows XP or a beta edition of Windows Vista installed. If you own a PC running Windows 2000, Windows 98, Windows ME, or Windows 95, you will need to carefully compare their system capabilities to the information available on our Get Ready site. In general, PCs purchased within the last two years have a better chance of being able to run Windows Vista as is or with affordable improvements to the system hardware.
If you're happy and you know it......it's your meds.
LOL I thought it must have been a program that ran in Vista advising you that new upgrades were available, like windows update, but also giving advise on whether you really needed the update.
Windows Vista Upgrade Advisor does not send or collect any personal identifiable data to Microsoft Corporation or any other third parties during this process. For additional information you can review the Microsoft Windows Vista Upgrade Advisor Privacy Statement.
I'm wondering why Zone Alarm lit up like a neon candle during the install?
If you're happy and you know it......it's your meds.
I'm wondering why Zone Alarm lit up like a neon candle during the install?
Perhaps because the scan is actually done online rather than internal(?). The disclaimer reads "personal identifiable data"...doesn't say anything about other data....which means it is probably picking up everything else like activation keys, etc. and comparing them with their logs at Redmond (or India....or Sri Lanka....or wherever they are keeping them these days...). Wouldn't be surprised....
Desktop: Intel i7 960 CPU @ 4.0GHz, EVGA Classified 4-Way SLI mobo, 12GB Corsair Dominator-GT 2000 DDR3 RAM, Crucial RealSSD C300 256GB Solid State Drive, Two WD 2TB SATA drives, 2x EVGA GTX 570 Superclocked graphics cards in SLI, Coolermaster HAF X full tower case, OCZ ZX 1250w PSU, Corsair H100 CPU Cooler Laptop: MSI GT60-004US, 2x Seagate Momentus XT 750GB SSD Hybrid drives in RAID 0, 16GB DDR3 1600 RAM, GeForce 670M 3GB graphics card, Networks 'Killer' N-1103 WLAN card
Running XP-Pro sp2 here. Wouldn't let me run the 'advisor' until I installed .Net Vers.1 (la-de-da ) Then it ran,but had to tell ZA to let it access the internet for a "COM surrogate" whatever. Now that I've toodled over here,checked ZA and it now has "another" entry with all question marks for "Vista Upgrade Advisor". ???? Think it's gon'na want to call home? Hmmm?? Yep,,I think so. So it's going to be locked right now! Don't care what the install "agreement" said!!
Stuff it M$!!
Oh yeah,one more lil' thing. I realize this is a 'beta' staged program,but it said I would need a TV tuner card to be able to use the video functions. Well,guess what? I have the ATI AIWonder Radeon 9600 card already installed and pull video from everywhere already! Surprised it didn't say I'd also need two tin cans and a very long piece of string to get VOIP too...
Stupid question? No such thing!
Virtual Dr. to the rescue!
Just ask. Bookmark your post for easy reference.
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