Windows 7 Professional (x86) (32-bit) (pl).iso

supernewbeat.bitballoon.comWindows 7 Professional (x86) (32-bit) (pl).iso ► ► ►
Windows 7 Professional (x86) (32-bit) (pl).iso 4,3/5 7539reviews
Windows 7 Professional (x86) (32-bit) (pl).iso

Download Windows 7 SP1 ISO ( x86 / x64 ) Image. Windows 7 32-bit Ultimate x86 English; Windows 7 64-bit Ultimate x64 English; Windows 7 32-bit Professional x86 English; Windows 7 64-bit Professional x64 English; Windows 7 32-bit Home Premium x86 English; Windows 7 64-bit Home Premium X64. My idea on Dell IdeaStorm for Dell here to make Dell customised Windows.iso files is picking up some momentum and is now under review so hopefully something will be. Since I am a student, I obviously don't have $150 to purchase the CD/DVD, so I am looking for a free download of Windows 7/ 32 bit.

This excellent German site has a list of all DELL OEM disks for Windows 7. It offers both Windows 32 bit and 64 bit, in several languages.

**** This is the greatest find ever for Dell owners. You’ll need to download Windows 7 as a torrent – and burn to disk.

Dell OEM Windows 7 Start Dell OEM Windows 7 Home Dell OEM Windows 7 Professional Dell OEM WIndows 7 Ultimate **** Then enter the Microsoft serial number (that’s on a sticker on the side of your Dell PC), and away you go. **** Step 1 – Make sure you can download torrents Select the Language, Windows 7 version (to match your sticker and serial number). Languages Available DELL OEM Versions include GERMAN, ENGLISH, DUTCH, RUSSIAN, FINNISH, SPANISH, FRENCH, ITALIAN. **** To burn the.iso to a DVD use imgburn **** All done! ***** Cracking passwords and understanding encryption is an essential skill for Cyber Security, Penetration Testing, Computer Security, Information Security and Cryptology. This prep guide, will take you step by step through hashing algorithms in a visual format. The aim is that you will learn through seeing and doing – and will understand hashing algorithms at an intuitive level.

Reference **** If the sticker has worn out, or come off the pc, you can extract the license keys manually. *Do this before you reinstall your OS not after it How to find Windows 7 License keys – including Windows 10, Exchange, SQL Server and OFFICE keys How to back up your entire Windows 7 OS including license keys – free for home users. Vishal kothawde I have dell xps 15 laptop which had Windows 7 Home premium pre installed from dell, i mistakenly formatted my PC while doing some RnD and now lost by OS.

I’m very unfortunate that i never made recovery discs for my os and my dell provided windows 7 cd is some how lost. Now im in middle of desert like i dont have any choice. I have question like would above will work with my existing dell provided OEM windows 7 pre installed “Key” which i have some how?

Please reply ASAP awaiting disparately for answer. Hi Vishal, You probably have a sticker on the base of your laptop, which hopefully contains your license serial number. Some OEM’s have stopped doing this – which is a major mistake, as we all need to reinstall the OS sooner or later. Try this link for Produkey to get back your license key. As you’ve erased the OS, it may not work – but you might be lucky. As a final push – you could try to recover files on the hard drive using a free forensics tool. Windows does not “delete” files.

So it’s likely the license is still intact on your laptop – but you just have to get to it. First, try to recover your data using DME. Take out the laptop drive – put it into a disk caddy. Attach that disk caddy to a second laptop that is running DME. That way you can find /see all the intact files that windows has never deleted. Save any important files onto the second laptop or a usb drive. That way you have a backup of the lost files.

Or try to reinstall your windows 7 OS on your laptop. Windows says that this erases all the data, but it does not. Windows does not carry out secure delete – but there is a chance that you could overwrite a file by accident, which is a chance you may have to take. Then use Produkey and see if the license files can be found. Windows will work for a trial period before you need to activate it.

You can use Produkey in this time to see if you can find your Dell OEM keys. Let me know how you get on. It’s devasting when you lose the os. So your final step is to use a FREE software program call “Reflect” to take a backup of your entire system when you’ve got the OS back on line.

This way, you’ll always be able to restore your OS/ license keys in future. How to install /use Reflect. (it’s free for home users). Hi Phill, Great question. I’ve been having a quick look and it’s not obvious straight away. But on the far right hand side is a link to the MSDN link with Microsoft, that might help.

Windows 7 Professional with Service Pack 1 (x64) – DVD (English) ISO English Release Date: 5/12/2011 Details Product Keys Download 3167 MB This media refresh includes the installation hotfix described in KB Article 2534111. No other changes have been made to the product. File Name: en_windows_7_professional_with_sp1_x64_dvd_u_676939.iso Like. Jay Hi there – I am trying to find the right download for my dad’s dell laptop.

Long story short, it came with Win 7 Home premium and unfortunately after microsoft pushed out Win 10, there were a lot of issues with the computer so we tried to go back to Win 7, but was not able to. We then did a factory restore, but it restored to Win 10. No other restore points available and Dell is of no help of course.

I am D/L the iso named X17-58997.iso but am unsure what the difference is/if it is the right one. Any advice is helpful.It’s 64bit and we do have the product key available. Appreciate it. Hi Jay, Within a month of a windows 10 upgrade, you can roll back to windows 7 quite easily. It’s a shame that you didn’t shout out – as I’ve rolled back quite a few laptops that were aggressively forced onto Win 10. Okay, go to start >Settings >click “update and recovery” >select recovery >“Go back to Windows 7”. Try this out on win 10 to get back to win 7.

If you’ve done a factory restore and its’ taken you to win 10, then I’m hoping the recovery option will be there for you. **DO THIS QUICKLY – YOU HAVE A MAX OF 1 MONTH TO ROLLBACK** further links are here: Good luck, and let me know if you need help (ie the rollback fails). Hi Jay, Just been checking out your options. Home Premium 2.

64 bit Def looks like you’d need X17 – 58997.iso. So you’re on the right track.

Burn the.iso to a DVD. Next alter the bios boot sequence, so that it boots from the DVD first (not hard drive). Then the DVD will whirl and churn for a while – which is good as its transferring the start up files. Follow the onscreen menu’s – they’ll ask for country, date, time etc. It will need to reboot. Your license key is for win 7 home premium – so your keys will work as long as your operating system (home premium, 64 bit), matches the key. Here is a Dell article on how to change the bios boot order (so that it reads the DVD first).

Power on laptop >2. Keep tapping F2 until you get a blue screen (pics on the dell forum) 3. Download Game Interaktif Untuk Anak Tk more. Probably hard drive will be selected >you need to change this to CD/DVD using the +/- keys 5. F10 and Yes to save your changes.

**remember Wins 7 has been installed to change the boot order back. It’s also a good idea to remove the win 7 DVD as soon as you can – otherwise it’ll load the DVD again. So as soon as the install has completed, take the DVD out and go for a reboot. At the end you’ll need to do the F2 and access the blue screens to change the DVD option back to hard drive.

You’ll become an expert on blue menu options 🙂 Let me know how you get on, or if you get stuck at any stage.

Introduction Despite these guides being Dell based. The instructions on this page should work for all Windows 7 OEM Licenses and Retail Licenses. The Free Upgrade to Windows 10 RS3 Microsoft are keen for you to Upgrade to Windows 10. The newest build is very stable and will work fine for the vast majority of users. The Upgrade is Free and you may directly Clean Install Windows 10 RS3 (version 1709) or later: See for more details and installation guides. Contents • • • • • • Windows 7 SP1 – Retail and Commercial OEM Download Links For Dell Systems updated are recommended.

The Windows 7 November 2011.isos from Microsoft are unbranded and can be used with any Windows 7 OEM or Retail License. For OEM Licenses one may skip the product key during installation to begin a 30 day trial and apply their manufacturers OEM SLP post installation to activate Windows 7. Microsoft’s software download page for Windows 7 is however unfortunately non-functional. Jan Krohn’s is a utility that essentially fixes the flawed user interface of Microsoft’s software download page allowing the generation of proper download links.

These Download Links are to untouched.iso files stored on Microsoft’s servers. To the right select Windows 7: Then select “Windows 7 Professional SP1” under Edition as downloads to Windows 7 Professional are often more reliable. The Windows 7.iso contains all the other Editions; to get the other Editions one can easily delete a small text file once they have created their Bootable USB to unlock Windows 7 Starter (32 Bit only), Windows 7 Home Basic, Windows 7 Home Premium and Windows 7 Ultimate. N options used to show up with this tool and should be avoided.

The N editions are unpopular, substandard editions of Windows 7 without media features that Microsoft had to produce due to a lawsuit by the EU (N). In practice they were very rarely sold even in the EU27 countries and will not activate with normal product keys or OEM SLP.

K and KN options were restricted Editions for sale in North Korea. Next select confirm and then select your desired language. This guide will use English Language as an example.

You will now have direct Download Links to the 64 Bit.iso or 32 Bit.iso (64 Bit recommended in most cases). English File Sizes and Checksums For Windows 7 – English UK and English US are the same “Language”. The time and currency format and keyboard or input method can be selected for English UK (International English) or English US respectively: The Microsoft Windows and Microsoft.iso Downloader Tool generates direct download links from Microsoft’s servers. It doesn’t check whether the.iso you downloaded is complete or not. For the English.isos the file size is 2,504,372 KB for Windows 7 32 Bit and 3,243,070 KB for Windows 7 64 Bit.

The checksums can be checked with Rufus (which we will use later to make the Bootable USB): Rufus doesn’t need to be installed. Launch Rufus: Select yes at the user account control prompt. Select the load.iso icon: Select your.iso and select open: Select #: This will give you the.iso checksums: The English.isos they should match the following. If they do not you have an incomplete download. Win7_Pro_SP1_English_x32 (2,504,372 KB) • MD5: 0bff99c8310ba12a9136e3d23606f3d4 • SHA1: d89937df3a9bc2ec1a1486195fd308cd3dade928 • SHA256: fd4cdf56e0087ac4af3ee7ca96366322e271ddd4838e Win7_Pro_SP1_English_x64 (3,243,070 KB) • MD5: ed15956fe33c13642a6d2cb2c7aa9749 • SHA1: 0bcfc54019ea175b1ee51f6d2b207a3d14dd2b58 • SHA256: 3dae1a531b90fa72e59b4a8d398c8c070da4a5c5a44fe08b1b6e55 Checking if your System has an UEFI Boot Power down your Dell and then power up and Press [F12]. For non-Dells you may have to use [Esc] or another Function key [F1-F12]. This will take you to your systems Boot Menu.

If it mentions at the top “Boot Mode' then you have a UEFI BIOS. For Windows 7 Installation: • The Boot Mode should be set to UEFI. • Secure Boot should be Off • Legacy ROMs settings (not shown on the Boot Manager Screen) should be Enabled.

• Note that early UEFI systems may not have Secure Boot and hence no need for Legacy ROM Settings. For details in Enabling these settings see. If it doesn’t mention at the top “Boot Mode' then you have an older system with a Legacy BIOS. Creating a Bootable USB Insert a 16 GB USB Flash Drive and launch Rufus: Select yes at the user account control prompt. Select the load.iso icon: Select your.iso and select open: For a UEFI system ensure the partition scheme is GPT for UEFI is selected and the file system is NTFS.

For a Legacy system ensure the partition scheme is MBR for Legacy BIOS and the file system is NTFS. Select Start: You will get a warning informing you that data on your USB will be wiped. Select OK: Wait for Rufus to make your Bootable USB you will see the green progress bar: When its finished it will say Ready. Additional Notes for a UEFI BIOS November 2010 Installation Media does not have support for hardware made in 2011-2016.

You’ll likely need to incorporate USB 3.0 drivers into the boot.wim and install.wim files and Storage Controller drivers into the install.wim file otherwise your Windows 7 installation will fail. I’ve tried to make this as simple as possible see my guide. Note hardware manufactured in mid 2017 or later is not supported by Microsoft or Intel for Windows 7. • Installation media without USB 3.0 driver support will lead to one being stuck on this screen with no response from the mouse or keyboard.

• Installation Media without Storage Controllers will result in the following error: “A required CD DVD drive device driver is missing. If you have a driver floppy disc, CD, DVD, or USB flash Drive, please insert it now.

Note: If the Windows installation media is in the CD/DVD drive, you can safely remove it for this step.” Delete the EI.cfg file The ei.cfg should be deleted after the Bootable USB is made to allow installation of all Editions of Windows 7 for a Corresponding Architecture. Open up the USB in Windows Explorer go to the sources folder and look for ei.cfg and delete it. During installation you will get the option to install your desired Edition of Windows 7: Its advised to install Windows 7 without a Product Key to initiate a 30 Day Trial Install and then to reapply via a simple batch file. Install Windows 7 To install Windows 7 see. Notes on Windows Update If the updates have not been slipstreamed into the installation media they should be applied immediately post-installation. Service Stack: 2. Convenience Rollup: 3.

Prequisite Updates for IE11: 4. The Latest Security Rollup from the Microsoft Update Catalog: Simply download the.msu files and install them, then restart your computer when prompted. Note you must restart after each update.

You need to purchase a product key or you can install without one for a 30 day trial. If you have a system which came with Windows 7 Home Premium OEM preinstalled e.g.

From Dell there should be a COA affixed to the system (maybe in the battery compartment of laptops or computer cover of desktops). For more details see Windows Reinstallation Guide/A Clean install of Windows 7: You can purchase a retail/OEM Windows 7 Home Premium license from the likes of NewEgg, Amazon etc. And input the product key provided to activate. I’m going to use your files and tutorials to do clean installs of windows 7 on (3) oem machines this weekend (all machines have windows 7 COA stickers). I figured clean installs are going to be MUCH faster than installing via the oem recovery media, which puts a massive amount of bloatware that bleeds everywhereno matter how hard I try, I cannot get rid of it all. I’ve already contacted microsoft support, and they said that using the digital river iso’s on oem machines is perfectly fineas long as the product key on the COA sticker is valid for the windows 7 version on the iso.

Thanks so much for putting this together! If you are trying to perform downgrade rights then you need installation media with HP system locked preinstallation as no Windows 7 key is provided for downgrade rights. I have these for Dell systems listed here For HP I have the files for Home Premium and can probably make these up for Professional and Ultimate from that (I have not uploaded these yet and these are untested). If the system has a Windows 7 Professional COA included then you can use the 25 Digit product key on that and manually activate via phone. Okay so you have a Windows Vista Business COA with downgrade rights to Windows XP. Firstly did you get a new product key with the Reinstallation DVD, if not you should know that the System Locked Preinstallation key from the Windows 7 Reisntallation DVD will be rejected in your system as Dell never sold it with Windows 7. The DVD drive in the E521 does it read other DVDs?

You can try a lens cleaning CD as there may be some dust blocking the DVD laser. Its also possible that the DVD laser has failed (if it can’t read other DVDs this is likely the case). Dear philipyip sir, greetings for india, first of all i would like to thank you for this wonderful service and help you are doing for all of us.i really want to thank you from my heart.thank you sir.thank u. I am trying to download dell oem windows 7 home premium 64bit sp1 iso file.but after downloading and mounting it through daemon tools, in my dvd drive it shows as windows proffesional and not home premium.can you please check at your end?have the iso’s been misplaced??i dont want to delete ei.cfg file because my pc was home premium so i presume it will automatically get activated.and i also have my genuine win7 home premium 64bit sp1 key with me. Once again.philip sir. I want to thank you.really thanks a lot.

My pc is fully crashed.and my oem disc is not working.you are the only hope on interent.as there are no oem isos available anywhere philip sir.greetings from india. Waiting for your revert. HI philipyip, I just have a little concern for which I can’t really find an answer anywhere explaining this more thoroughly: If you look at the bootom of this tutorial from Sevenforums. Com it states that for dell users the recovery partition will be obsolete after reinstall! I’d hate to loose that! Is this true? I’d really like to reinstall windows 7 professional 64 bit oem on my studio1747 but using the Italian version ( since I’m a language enthusiast) but trying not to loose the recovery partition since it comes in soo HANDY!

(off course I will also make recovery cd/dvd/usb before reinstalling, just in ase). Was also wondering if a reinstall or factory reset would effect my entire hard drive or only the system partition C: ie not my extended partition i’ve created to store data?? Many many thanks in advance since I know you’re the expert on this! If you go through the procedure of manual clean install with a Windows 7.iso the recovery partition will be rendered useless. Moreover if you have extended and shrunk the main partition, Dell Backup and Recovery may not work, rendering your recovery partition already useless.

It usually does not like users or software/malware resizing partitions on the main drive. If you delete all partitions during the clean installation you can install Dell Backup and Recovery after Windows Updates and driver installation and make a new recovery partition from your clean install. You can try updating to the latest version of Dell Backup and Recovery which has some fixes and enhancements to address some of these issues. If it installs okay and finds the recovery partition, make the Dell Backup and Recovery media. In the case of the Studio 1747 it will have a legacy non-UEFI BIOS so the Recovery Bootable USB is recommended (although that models probably modern enough to be able to also boot from an external hard drive).

You can use it to restore the hard drive to factory state including the recovery partition. I’ve tested this even after a secure wipe with DBAN. Its advisable to maybe make 2 Bootable USBs as a backup just in case. You should ensure you use the latest version of Dell Backup and Recovery before proceeding. I am working on a Dell Backup and Recovery guide now that I have a device that is capable of capturing video within the Dell BIOS, it is still very much incomplete and I need some new Dell hardware with a UEFI BIOS for testing purposes: However I did make a guide restoring from a System Recovery USB a couple of days ago: You will see all the screens from the Recovery USB however my particular guide goes through deletion of everything and reverting to the factory state (the image of my clean installation). There are however options to perform the factory refresh instead of the factory recovery. I have to admit I have not tested the creation of other partitions using a third party utility or at clean installation or the factory refresh function.

As mentioned I need some additional hardware to make a Dell Backup and Recovery Guide that I am satisfied with (and I have got some of this additional hardware). However I also need time and right now I am writing a PhD thesis moreover there should be a major update to Dell Backup and Recovery in March which would automatically make the guide obsolete. By that time I should have all the hardware I need and perhaps some time to do testing and write tutorials. My Dell E6410 had the partition disk with = Windows 7 Pro oa Latam (X16-96091) I bought it from another person and it had the partition erased. Now im running W10 pro Insider preview, instaled over a pirate copy of W7 ultimate. I got 2.iso of windows 7 that i found in the net= -X17-58868 (W7 pro latam, 3.175.808 Kb) This is from digital river according to the link and it´s the same version. -Win7Prox64SP1-DellOEM (5.488.294 kb) has also “windows loader” in a separete winrar file The size is huge, i found that it has a recovery iso inside, and and “oem” folder Will this last version work to get a windows 7 copy activated in my machine or i better install the other.iso Most probable that both versions will be pirate?

I just realised I uploaded ones without USB 3.0 so I have updated the Home Premium 64 Bit and Professional 64 Bit.iso. I will upload the Ultimate one later. It said on the Microsoft website “This rollup package includes most updates that were released after the release of SP1 for Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2, through April 2016.” but didn’t include IE11.

Having to install 109 is still too many but beats over 200 which I had to install in the past. Microsoft should have made up to date.isos available every 6 months, never understood their resistance to do so. Thats because Microsoft don’t refer to it as a Service Pack. They call it a “convenience rollup” See my note at the top: Note Microsoft silently released Windows 7 Service Pack 2 silently at the End of April 2016. They however called it KB3125574 “Convenience Rollup Update for Windows 7 SP1'. This rollup package includes almost all the updates that were released after the release of SP1 for Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2, through April 2016. In other words this is the 5 year awaited “Windows 7 Service Pack 2“.

KB3020369 (Perquisite update for Service Pack 2) is required before installation of KB3125574 (Service Pack 2). For whatever reason Microsoft’s marketing team seem to be against the word Service Pack since Windows 8 was released I will refer to this as Service Pack 2 however. Hello, I had an Acer laptop with Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit. Unfortunately, the laptop motherboard died a couple of months ago and I thought I’d migrate the laptop hard drive to a spare Dell Optiplex mini-tower that I have. However, the system got stuck on “Starting Windows” loop and wouldn’t even boot in safe mode. I tried to use the Acer’s recovery utility, but it has made matters worse and the system is now completely hosed. There’s no “Startup” screen/logo, and pressing Alt-F10 no longer takes me to Acer Recovery – apparently, the Recovery Partition is no longer there.

I summary, I am stuck with a Dell mini-tower, a hard drive with a corrupted installation of Win 7 Home Premium 64-bit, and a Certificate of Authenticity for Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit from the Acer laptop. What are my options? Thanks in advance for your help! First of all the license is OEM – Original Equipment Manufacturer.

An OEM license is a cheaper Windows licence designed to by preinstalled and supported by OEMs. As an OEM can only support their own hardware the main limitation is the license is non-transferable i.e. Is permanently tied to the original hardware specifically the motherboard So you’d have Microsoft Product Activation issues after attempting the transfer. Second of all the OptiPlex likely has a substantially different chipset so the Windows 7 OEM install won’t boot. Attempting to restore to the recovery partition if it was there would flag up that the system is non Acer and give an error message. What model of OptiPlex?

What license does it have? Not sure about the SFC errors I can try loading in a VM later and see if I can reproduce it but since it “fixes” it and says the problem is there again I would trust the.iso more than the SFC scan I have tested they.iso and the installs are stable. Regarding the Dell website when you input a Service Tag it should list all the drivers specific for your system. In many cases it lists the wrong variants which is why my guides also instruct in using the FTP website If the Device Manager says you have a 1704 card, it is right and the Dell website is wrong If you are getting errors for both thats a problem can you give me hardware IDs. If nothing shows try to turn the wifi switch on and off.

You may need Dell Quickset to do so. Some more details as I realise this comment is for the Windows 7 guide and not the Windows 10 guide. For Windows 8.x/10 Installation Media to pass SecureBoot you need to use FAT32 which means you are limited to 32 GB.

As a USB Flash Drive can only have 1 partition its storage will be docked if a USB Flash Drive is 64 GB or greater. A USB HDD/SSD or internal HDD/SSD can have multiple partitions so can have a small FAT32 Boot partition and then larger NTFS partition. This has caused issues on the forums where users thought they had broke their USB flash drive by making Windows Installation Media.

You should be able to use the 64 GB USB to make Windows 10 Installation Media. You will need to use Disk Management (right click start and select Disk Management) to delete the FAT32 partition and make a single NTFS partition. However because this guide is for Windows 7 (which cannot pass SecureBoot) and not windows 8.1/10 the USB Flash Drive can be setup to use the GPT partition scheme and NTFS. This configuration has to be used as the “Windows 7 SP2”.iso has a file on it (the install.wim) which exceeds 4 GB. I just used 16 GB drives as they are what I have too hand.

Not sure how 64 GB USB flash drives will cope but it should be fine. What am I doing wrong?! I’ve spent 5 days trying this and fail every time. I have a brand new XPS 13 9350 with Win 10.

Your instructions differ in 2 places from what I experience. 1) The BIOS has an option for Enable UEFI Network Stacks that is defaulted to disabled. 2)In using Rufus, the is no Fat32. It’s either exFat or Large Fat so I selected NTFS as you recommend. After booting into the Win 7 install, I can’t get past the error ” A required CD/DVD drive device driver is missing.” I’ve tried many attempts of different scenerios injecting Dells drivers iaStorAC.inf & iaAHCIC.inf into a your iso, my own iso via NTLite and using Rufus without luck. In several cases, NTLite fails warning me that those drivers are wrong – recall they came straight from Dell for this purpose. Can I not install Win 7 after booting into 10 via setup.exe?

Any help is greatly appreciated. Thanks Allan. The 2015 download ver worked!!

Thank you for allowing me to hassle you with my issues. Your site is now a permanent addition to my Favorites lists! Just for the record, I successfully got past the CD required error for the following XPS 13 9350 purchased 8/2016 using the download you noted in the comment above dated AT 19:07. Bios ver: 1.4.4 2. EPSA: Build 4304.07 UEFI ROM 3.

Bios Boot file used: PCIRoot for SATA 0x2,0x0 /HD GPT 4. I booted using UEFI with GPT formated USB 3.0 5. I manually added a USB boot device but did not use it in lieu of item 3 above via the Bios auto detection. I know I’m looking a gift horse in the mouth, but do you have any plans of updating the 2016 download version? The 2016 version would have been updated if (1.) I knew exactly what additional drivers Dell had added and (2.) I had 6th generation Intel hardware to test with. Also (3.) it take a long time to slipstream the updates to the.iso and a long time to upload the.iso.

However the guide needs to be updated. Essentially: The 2016.iso that I created then updated from my Reinstallation DVD can likely be used for hardware up to the Intel 5th generation processors. The 2015.iso that I got indirectly from Dell Technical Support is for the Intel 6th generation Processors (Skylake Chipset). The Dell systems are as mentioned here although oddly the XPS range isn’t listed. Your XPS 9350 is 6th generation Intel: I had issues when I tested the Skylake.iso with the 2nd generation Intel Processor (OptiPlex 790/7010) and 5th generation Intel Processor (Inspiron 7347). Hence the guide doesn’t recommend this.iso in most cases.

Soon there will be 7th generation Intel Processors which will likely need a new.iso •. I have a Samsung laptop model R440 with a 64bit OS running Win7 Home Premium SP1.

Recently my HDD started going bonkers so I bought a new HDD. Before replacing the HDD I went to MS website to try and download a copy of Win 7 but after entering the key, it said; “Error The product key you’ve entered appears to be for software which was pre-installed by the device manufacturer. Please contact the device manufacturer for software recovery options.' (Yup I have an OEM license) I called Samsung Service Center and they wanted me to bring my laptop down and their techs will reinstall Win7 for me for an exorbitant fee which is more than half the price if I were to purchase a new Win7 key!!!! Based on your guide, I do not understand which steps to take to obtain the correct ISO of my Windows 7.

Igi 7 Pc Game more. (Or if it is possible at all) Can help me break it down in layman terms of what I should do? Sorry if I am asking too much. But whatever help you can give would be greatly appreciated. I refuse to part money with Samsung because they have screwed me many times over. (Read: They would find ways and means to make a customer pay for something even if the product is still under warranty!! Bloody criminals!) I just need a workable ISO copy of Win7 SP1 for my laptop. Thank you very much, Mike •.

First of all, I would like to thank you for a great post with lots and lots of information. My mother’s laptop is a Toshiba Satellite C55-B5350 which originally had Windows 7 Pro OA X18-82072 but I assumed she upgraded it to Windows 10 when that rolled out. I believe the hard drive is completely empty, except a 30 MB Boot drive I can only access when trying to load drivers. I followed the steps of downloading Windows 7 Pro SP1 COEM, then using Rufus with a 64gb USB and the “MBR partition scheme for BIOS or UEFI”. Everything loads correctly and the first couple of prompts go smoothly but once I get to the part of installing Windows on to a Disk it fails and spits out an error of “Windows is unable to install to the selected location. Error: 0x80300024.” I’ve tried looking at other sites and forums but everyone else had multiple disks/partitions and were typically dual-booting.

I just have one disk showing, titled “Disk 0 Unallocated Space”. How should I move past this error in order to do a clean install of Windows?

You are using the wrong partition scheme. The old GPT partitions are preventing you from installing Windows.

That system has a 4th generation i3 (Quarter 3 2013) and Windows should be using the GPT partition scheme for UEFI BIOS. Windows 10 RS1 should be better to install: It’ll have better inbuilt driver support as it is 2016 installation media. If you stick to Windows 7 64 Bit installation use the GPT partition scheme.

You may wish to use the Windows Installation Media (once remade using the GPT partition scheme) to wipe the hard drive using Diskpart see here: You’ll probably also need SATA preinstallation drivers as the 2011 commerical OEM.isos are 2-3 years older than your hardware. Hi Philip, Great job on the Win 7 guide! Please tell me what I am doing wrong! I want to re-install Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bits on a Dell Inspiron N5110 of 2012 with a non UEFI BIOS.

I downloaded the iso from your site. I used Rufus 2.11 to check the integrity of the file. Everything is fine. I transfer it to an 8 gig USB drive using your instructions for a non UEFI Bios.

I boot the laptop with the USB key, the Windows installation begin and now I have the popup telling me a driver is missing (like you said on your guide). On another USB drive, I has downloaded the SATA drivers, I browse my USB drive to find the F6FLPY-X64 folder, I select it, press NEXT. And 2 minutes after I receive that popup mesage: “No new devices could be found. Make sure the driver files are correct and located on the driver installation media. I tried to install the same driver from the Dell Drivers CD.

I tried to install the SATA driver from my hard drive with the old installation of Windows 7. At that point, I think the installation process want another driver (not the SATA), I have tried ALL the drivers on the Dell Drivers CD of my Inspiron N5110 computer. Always the same error message. I can’t go further.

What is my problem? Where I do a mistake Phillip?? The.iso is good if the checksums match the ones I list. Although your system just missed out on a UEFI Boot it does have some newer hardware such as USB 3.0 ports and you will get such an error message if using a USB 3.0 port The system has (2) USB 3.0, (1) USB 2.0 and (1) USB 2.0 with E-SATA Power Share ports.

In your case you should be able to use the USB 2.0 port for the Bootable USB otherwise you can follow my guide here to add USB 3.0 support to the install.wim and boot.wim and other updates to the install.wim. You can clean install Windows 10 Home using your Windows 7 Home Premium Product Key (regardless if your OEM support it or not – likely all the drivers are inbuilt to Windows 10 Installation Media or obtained automatically via Windows Update). You can clean install Windows 7 using OEM SLP. This guide gives instructions in doing so although you may want to use the Backup feature of the ABR program for your Sony (as I haven’t done in depth testing for Sony systems). For a dual boot you should clean install Windows 7 and then clean install Windows 10. Note strictly in accordance to the license agreement you should only run 1 version of Windows at a time Some “MVPs” say this will prevent a dual boot however you can only run 1 instance of Windows at a time in a dual boot and activation will work without a hassle.