I want to restore my computer as if i just bought it with all the stuff you have to do to configure it such as accounts and what not. I tried looking it up but i could not figure it out.
Thanks in advance.
Thanks in advance.
He said a windows 7 pc. Hardware doesnt matter much.Wait, what model computer is it?
I wasn't asking for the specs. The make and model matter, because modern prebuilt models tend to include a recovery partition (opposed to separate discs), so he wouldn't need to pirate a copy of the ISO or burn it or worry about activation, etc.He said a windows 7 pc. Hardware doesnt matter much.
Isn't there supposed to be a recovery partition on every one of those things?
Well thanks guys but I just went out and bought windows 8 but thanks again for trying to help
Oh okay thanks very much, i didn't know you could download a legit copy, kinda wasted my money but what the hay.Good on you for buying Windows 8.
But, to answer your question in a way that I think is better than previous posters:
1. DO NOT download a "cracked" version of Windows. This is your OS we are talking about here. Don't trust some 17-year-old script kiddie living in his mom's basement to modify that kind of stuff for you! You can download legit, unmodified copies of the install disks for FREE directly from Microsoft. Windows 7 links are here, and information on how to get Windows 8 disks is here.
2. You can either burn the images to a disk, or what I usually recommend, make a bootable USB drive. Doing the former requires burning software and (more importantly) a working disk drive. The latter can be accomplished with virtually no new tools by following this guide (it works for Windows 8 as well).
3. Boot from your install media and put Windows on your machine. Choose "Advanced Installation" and delete any existing partitions on your disk. Then click "Next" and let the installer to its thing.
4. Boot up your system and get all of the drivers you need. Windows Update will do most of this for you if you let it, making it so that you only need to find and install your wireless or wired networking driver. Use "Computer Management", and copy the hardware ID of the device into the search box of the Microsoft Update Catalog. It will generally return the driver (or list of drivers) that can be used for that particular device.
That's pretty much the basics. The rest is just practice and time.
By the way My computer says that my processor is x64 based, does this mean i can install x64 architecture because i already installed x86
To the average user, there is negligible difference between running an x86 (32-bit) and an x86-64 (64-bit) operating system. The technical difference is the size of the address space, main memory bus, and to some extent the instructions used by your CPU, but the real world difference is pretty much zero.
Windows 8 32-bit (x86) will run pretty much any program out there (most are still coded and compiled as 32-bit applications). Windows 8 64-bit (x86-64) will run all of the programs that Windows 8 32-bit can run, plus any 64-bit only applications. To be able to do this, Windows 8 64-bit actually installs 2 versions of Windows at the same time: the 32-bit version and the 64-bit version (this is called "Windows on Windows" technology, or WoW for short), thus using up much more disk space.
The only popular programs that I can think of that require a 64-bit version of Windows is/are some of the more advanced editors in the Adobe Creative Suite. So unless you need those, there is very little point in going through the whole install process again just to have a 64-bit operating system, so you might as well just continue to use the one you have.
Some may post here and say that you need the 64-bit version of Windows if you have more than 4GB of RAM. This is incorrect, as the 32-bit Windows kernel can use PAE (Physical Address Extension) to increase the amount of memory it can address, and has incorporated this technology for a long time now, rendering that point moot.
Hope that is understandable.