How To Install Windows 7 On Almost Any Netbook » -::: MITRAMSI :::-

Control Panel


Login Panel!


 
Register Forgot your password
User Panel
Navigation on the site: MitraMSI » Tutorial » How To Install Windows 7 On Almost Any Netbook

Navitgation

Top News

Calendar

Our Friends

How To Install Windows 7 On Almost Any Netbook Category: Tutorial
Added: 5 November 2009

altWindows 7 is free for now, and works extremely well on netbooks. That said, installing the OS on these tiny laptops—especially low-end models—can be daunting. Here's how to do it, the easy way:

If the Release Candidate is any indication (and it should be), then Windows 7 will be a nice upgrade for any Windows user. The new OS, however, is a huge step up for netbook users. Vista is notoriously poorly suited to netbooks; a buggy resource hog that subjects its users to incessant dialog boxes and requires far too many clicks to perform basic tasks, it's kind of a nightmare to use on a 9-inch laptop with a 1.5-inch trackpad.

Windows XP has been given a boost by netbooks, as its system requirements—more-or-less decided in 2001—are more in line with the specs hardware like the Eee PC and Mini 9. But let's face it: XP is nearly a decade old. Its user experience is trumped by free alternatives like Ubuntu Netbook Remix and Linpus, and it's not at all optimized for solid-state drives—especially cheap ones. This means that on low-end, SSD-based netbooks, it borders on unusable.

Hence, Windows 7. It's noticeably faster than Vista on low-spec machines, properly optimized for netbook hardware, and, most importantly, free (for now). Thing is, installation isn't quite as easy as it is on a regular PC—in fact, it can be a pain in the ass: netbooks don't have DVD drives, which means you've either got to get your hands on an external drive or boot from a USB stick for a clean install. Furthermore, smaller SSDs, like the 8GB units in popular versions of the Dell Mini 9 and Acer Aspire One, make a default installation impossible, or at least impractically tight. Luckily, there are simple methods to deal with both of these problems. Let's get started.

What You'll Need

• A netbook (Minimum 1GB of RAM, 8GB storage space)

• A 4GB or larger USB drive

• A Windows 7 RC Image (details below)

• A Windows XP/Vista PC or a Mac to prepare the flash drive

• For low-end netbooks, lots (and lots) of time

Getting Windows 7

altDownloading Windows 7 is a piece of cake. Just navigate to this page and download the 32-bit version. You'll need to get a free Windows Live ID if you don't already have one, but this takes about two minutes.

Microsoft will then give you your very own Windows 7 License key, valid until June 1st of next year. (Although after March 1st, it'll drive you to the edge of sanity by shutting off every two hours. But that's a different story, and March is a long way off). Microsoft will then offer up your ISO through a nifty little download manager applet, complete with a "resume" function. There are ways to sidestep this, but don't: you'd be surprised how hard it is to keep a single HTTP connection alive for long enough to download a 2.36GB file.

Preparing Your Flash Drive

This is the annoying part, but it's not necessarily that difficult. Here are some guides, by OS (some linked for length):
Windows XP
Windows Vista
• Mac OS X (courtesy of Ubuntu, funnily enough):

1. Open a Terminal (under Utilities)

2. Run diskutil list and determine the device node assigned to your flash media (e.g. /dev/disk2)

3. Run diskutil unmountDisk /dev/diskN (replace N with the disk number from the last command; in the previous example, N would be 2)

4. Execute sudo dd if=/path/to/downloaded.iso of=/dev/diskN bs=1m (replace /path/to/downloaded.iso with the path where the image file is located; for example, ./windows7.iso)

5. Run diskutil eject /dev/diskN and remove your flash media when the command completes (this can take a few hours on slower drives)

As some commenters have pointed out, you can also make a flash drive bootable with utilities like LiveUSB Helper. Once you've done this, you can mount your Windows 7 ISO with a utility like DaemonTools Lite (For Windows) or MountMe (for Mac), and just copy over all the files to your newly-bootable drive.

altStarting Your Install

Ok! Now you've got a bootable flash drive, and you're ready to start installing. It should go without saying, but once you start this process, you'll lose all existing data on your netbook, so you should back up any important files before going through with anything from here forward.

Insert your USB drive and reboot your netbook. As soon as your BIOS screen flashes, you should see instructions for a) changing your netbook's boot order or b) entering its BIOS setup. In the first situation, simply assign the USB drive as the first boot device. In the second, navigate through your BIOS settings until you find a "Default Boot Order" page, and do the same thing there.

From there, you should see the first Windows 7 installation screens. Anyone with a 16GB or larger storage device in their netbook can just follow the instructions until the installation completes, and skip the next step.

If your SSD is smaller than 16GB, or if you just want to save some space, do what they say, but only until the first reboot. After the Windows 7 installer has restarted your computer, you'll need to modify the boot order again. Do not allow installation to continue! Manually change the boot order to prioritize the USB drive again, just as you did at the beginning of the installation.

Compression!

Once the Windows 7 installer has copied most of its system files to your drive, you're going to tighten them up with Windows' trusty old "Compact" command. Here's what you do, as described by Electronic Pulp:

Choose "Repair" at the Windows 7 Setup screen, go to "Command Prompt" and enter the following code:

d: (or whatever drive letter is assigned to your SSD)
cd \windows\system32
compact.exe d:\*.* /c /s /i

And wait. And wait and wait and wait. This can take anywhere from eight hours to two days, so you'll want to set your netbook down in a corner and forget about it for a while. [Note: compressing so many of your system files does have a performance cost, but in day-to-day use, it's negligible]

Once this is done, reboot the netbook again and let it continue the installation as normal. That's it!

All said and done, an 8GB SSD should have nearly 2GB of free space left—not much, but enough to work with. And given that most netbooks come with inbuilt, flush SD expansion slots, and that high-capacity SD cards are extremely affordable, having a small amount of space on your root drive isn't at all prohibitive.

There are other ways to slim down a Windows 7 install—namely by using programs like vLite, which can strip out some of Windows' fat directly from the ISO—but Windows' built-in file compression is the easiest way to squeeze Windows 7 onto your skimpy 8GB SSD.

altSetup and Customization Help
Windows 7 runs fairly well out of the box, but as with any new Windows installation, you're going to need to download some drivers to get things working properly. Vista drivers usually do the trick, but sometimes workarounds are necessary. Thankfully, most popular netbooks have spawned helpful fan forums, many of which have active Windows 7 subforums. Some of the best:

Aspire One
ASUS Eee Pc
Dell Mini
MSI Wind
HP Mini-Note

Dear visitor, you went to the site as unregistered user. to register (it only takes 1 minute), or enter the site under your login.

Other publications on the topic:


Author: mitramsi    Views: 1341 Comments: 2 Print
Comment 1     1 February 2012 16:07

Group: User
Number of News: 0
Number of Comment: 16
Register: 31.01.2012
тема супер
Information
   Members of Guest cannot leave comments.
Ïîäïèñàòüñÿ íà íîâîñòè

Site Info

Articles
Top Contributors:
  1    mas_sas 277
  2    mitramsi 210
  3    brigs 67
  4    vint57 25
  5    kangmas 15
  6    ynior07 9
  7    KIN 8
  8    post78962 7
  9    emmet24son 3
  10    sn2012 2
  11    tahumie87 1
  12    aqmal 1
  13    msidot 1
  14    andersen 1
  15    shino 1
  16    dlavzroslihhh 1
  17    SuperNews2011 1
  18    Andy_mondol 1


Articles:
  This Hour: 0
  Today: 0
  This Month: 0
  All Time: 631


Membership:
  Registered Today :102
  This Hour:2
  This Month:3026
  Total:14601
  Banned:0

User
Online Users: 11

Visit
Today Visits: 4948
This Week Visits: 63287
This Month Visits: 311744
This Year Visits: 539771
All Visits: 2817537
Record: 26355 In 27.06.2011

Latest News

Referer

Google: mitrams
Google: mitramsi
Google: msi gts 250 oc edition
Google: dealer msi
Google: alfa artha andhaya
Google: driver american megatrend motherboard
Google: gmabooster for 4500
Google: v02.58 american megatrends bios advanced settings
Google: alfa artha andaya
Google: wat betekent jtpm1 van mijn motherboard P43 neo
Google: msi es500 adaptador
Google: msi indonesia
Google: motherboard led control
Google: alfa arya andaya
Google: Weirdly keyed PCIe slot
Google: distributor msi indonesia
Google: pt. alfa artha andhaya
Google: 9800gt mosfet
Google: msi ex460 everest temp
Google: sysprep breaks xp oem activation
Google: msi u100x uruchamianie z pendrive jak ustawi bios
Google: harga laptop msi ex460
Yndex.ru: MSI P67A-G65
Google: spesifikasi msi gts 250
Yahoo!: toko resmi msi
Yndex.ru: MSI Afterburner MOA
Google: where is memory remap feature MSI P55GD80
Google: msi bios 1.09 download
Google: northbridge voltage 890gx normal
Yahoo!: distributor memori mushkin indonesia
Yahoo!: distributor memori mushkin jakarta
Google: msi x320 clock generator
Google: Leadtek WinFast GTX460
Google: cross fire 2 way
Google: ami bios 2.61
Google: msi p45 platinum bios
Google: msi790fx mantap
Google: jual mainboard msi ex460
Google: x58-ud5 osx86 ahci
Google: merakit pc dengan multi gpu
Google: alfa artha
Google: zotac gtx 280 vs gtx 275
Google: multi gpu "ht link"
Google: hardware+monitor+di+bios
Google: hackintosh chassis
Google: harga mainboard for laptop msi 460x
Google: msi Z68A GD65/GD55
Google: alfa arta andaya
Google: showroom msi indonesia
Google: MSI Wind Top AE2210
Theme Created by Arya.
Copyright 2009-10 MitraMSI.com. All Rights Reserved.