"downgrading" Ultimate to XP
"downgrading" Ultimate to XP
Because some of the software that I need to use for work refuses to work on Vista, I'm going to have to "downgrade" to XP using the Lenovo X61s recovery disks. I'm going to do this on a new HD and save my original Vista drive.
I was wondering if anyone had advice on the least painful way to transfer settings (wifi, favorites, program settings etc) to the new drive. I'm going to have to re-install all of my programs of course. I have access to USB keys, HDs etc. I have the Apricorn external HD cloning setup also.
Does the Lenovo system migration program do a good job? Will it work Vista to XP?
Thanks
I was wondering if anyone had advice on the least painful way to transfer settings (wifi, favorites, program settings etc) to the new drive. I'm going to have to re-install all of my programs of course. I have access to USB keys, HDs etc. I have the Apricorn external HD cloning setup also.
Does the Lenovo system migration program do a good job? Will it work Vista to XP?
Thanks
Have you considered running your non-compatible software in a Virtual Machine? You can download Microsoft Virtual PC 2007 and install it in Vista. VPC2007 runs XP extremely well if you have an extra 0.5 GB of RAM to dedicate to the VM, so if your ThinkPad currently has 1.5 - 2 GB of RAM it should be fine. Honestly, I can't tell the difference between running XP natively and running it in a VM on Vista.
Doing this eliminates all of the migration issues, so you might consider it an alternative.
Doing this eliminates all of the migration issues, so you might consider it an alternative.
Mark
X61T 7764-CTO, Core 2 Duo L7500 LV 1.6 GHz, 4 GB RAM, 120 GB Intel X25M SSD
Multiboot w/Grub4DOS -- Windows 10, MustangPE, PartedMagic
My ex: X41T (2005 - 2009)
X61T 7764-CTO, Core 2 Duo L7500 LV 1.6 GHz, 4 GB RAM, 120 GB Intel X25M SSD
Multiboot w/Grub4DOS -- Windows 10, MustangPE, PartedMagic
My ex: X41T (2005 - 2009)
Yes, it's pretty easy to install. After configuring a blank VM you install XP just like on a physical machine, followed by an install of your non-compatible programs on the XP VM.
Four hints:
1. Dedicate 512 MB of RAM to the XP VM; it should run much better than with the minimum 256 MB of RAM.
2. When you create a virtual hard disk for XP, choose the Dynamically Expanding Disk unless you know the amount of disk space needed for XP and all of the software you will be installing. You'll need more than 4 GB for an install of XP.
3. Install the Virtual Machine Extensions (on the Action menu) after you get XP installed and running - it makes for a much better user experience.
4. After you get everything configured the way you like, make a copy of the virtual hard disk file. If XP gets borked some day, just replace the virtual hard disk with its backup copy.
Be aware that you would not want to run games with 3D graphics on a VM, but most standard software runs just as well as on physical hardware.
Four hints:
1. Dedicate 512 MB of RAM to the XP VM; it should run much better than with the minimum 256 MB of RAM.
2. When you create a virtual hard disk for XP, choose the Dynamically Expanding Disk unless you know the amount of disk space needed for XP and all of the software you will be installing. You'll need more than 4 GB for an install of XP.
3. Install the Virtual Machine Extensions (on the Action menu) after you get XP installed and running - it makes for a much better user experience.
4. After you get everything configured the way you like, make a copy of the virtual hard disk file. If XP gets borked some day, just replace the virtual hard disk with its backup copy.
Be aware that you would not want to run games with 3D graphics on a VM, but most standard software runs just as well as on physical hardware.
Mark
X61T 7764-CTO, Core 2 Duo L7500 LV 1.6 GHz, 4 GB RAM, 120 GB Intel X25M SSD
Multiboot w/Grub4DOS -- Windows 10, MustangPE, PartedMagic
My ex: X41T (2005 - 2009)
X61T 7764-CTO, Core 2 Duo L7500 LV 1.6 GHz, 4 GB RAM, 120 GB Intel X25M SSD
Multiboot w/Grub4DOS -- Windows 10, MustangPE, PartedMagic
My ex: X41T (2005 - 2009)
I don´t know about VM, as for Vista it depends on the VPN client. Some vendors may provide compatibility patches or even whole upgrades of their VPN software to make it work under Vista. As for VM in general, it very much depends on the software you are going to use. If it´s graphics or computational software (e.g. Solidworks or Matlab), running them in a VM machine isn´t great idea at all. They would all suffer from the performance and driver limitations in a VM machine.
IBM Lenovo Z61p | 15.4'' WUXGA | Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 2x 2.16GHz | 4 GB Kingston HyperX | Hitachi 7K500 500 GB + WD 1TB (USB) | ATI Mobility FireGL V5200 | ThinkPad Atheros a/b/g | Analog Devices AD1981HD | Win 7 x86 + ArchLinux 2009.08 x64 (number crunching)
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carbon_unit
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Virtualbox and VMware Server are other Virtual Machines you can use for free. There are advantages and disadvantages to all three programs.
Personally I prefer Virtualbox. YMMV.
Personally I prefer Virtualbox. YMMV.
T60 2623-D7U, 3 GB Ram.
Dual boot XP and Linux Mint.
Registered linux user #160145
Dual boot XP and Linux Mint.
Registered linux user #160145
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JPOESQ
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Installing XP under Virtual PC 2007
I tried this last night, but could not install XP from the Lenovo XP recover CD. I kept getting messages telling me that I did not have sufficient virtual memory, even when I varied the VM from 512M to 1024M and larger. Sometimes I also received a volume unmounted error. Is there a trick to this? I'm running Vista Ultimate.k0lo wrote:Have you considered running your non-compatible software in a Virtual Machine? You can download Microsoft Virtual PC 2007 and install it in Vista. VPC2007 runs XP extremely well if you have an extra 0.5 GB of RAM to dedicate to the VM, so if your ThinkPad currently has 1.5 - 2 GB of RAM it should be fine. Honestly, I can't tell the difference between running XP natively and running it in a VM on Vista.
Doing this eliminates all of the migration issues, so you might consider it an alternative.
John P. O'Banion, JD, PE, BSEE
Registered Patent Attorney
http://www.intellectual.com
600, X61s, X220, X230, T530
Registered Patent Attorney
http://www.intellectual.com
600, X61s, X220, X230, T530
John:
The Lenovo recovery CD will attempt to install a recovery partition along with a Windows XP partition, and is probably tied to specific Lenovo hardware, so it isn't surprising that it would fail to install correctly to a VM. You need to use a Windows XP CD to do the installation. Or, search for articles on the web that show how to extract an i386 folder from a working installation of Windows that can be used in place of a CD.
The Lenovo recovery CD will attempt to install a recovery partition along with a Windows XP partition, and is probably tied to specific Lenovo hardware, so it isn't surprising that it would fail to install correctly to a VM. You need to use a Windows XP CD to do the installation. Or, search for articles on the web that show how to extract an i386 folder from a working installation of Windows that can be used in place of a CD.
Mark
X61T 7764-CTO, Core 2 Duo L7500 LV 1.6 GHz, 4 GB RAM, 120 GB Intel X25M SSD
Multiboot w/Grub4DOS -- Windows 10, MustangPE, PartedMagic
My ex: X41T (2005 - 2009)
X61T 7764-CTO, Core 2 Duo L7500 LV 1.6 GHz, 4 GB RAM, 120 GB Intel X25M SSD
Multiboot w/Grub4DOS -- Windows 10, MustangPE, PartedMagic
My ex: X41T (2005 - 2009)
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JPOESQ
- **SENIOR** Member

- Posts: 159
- Joined: Sun May 16, 2004 2:26 pm
- Location: San Francisco, CA
- Contact:
Hi Mark,
I thought that might be the case, but reading this thread gave me the impression that it could be done using the recovery CD; perhaps not. In my case, I just ended up in an infinite loop of booting and never getting to the actual XP installation.
I thought that might be the case, but reading this thread gave me the impression that it could be done using the recovery CD; perhaps not. In my case, I just ended up in an infinite loop of booting and never getting to the actual XP installation.
John P. O'Banion, JD, PE, BSEE
Registered Patent Attorney
http://www.intellectual.com
600, X61s, X220, X230, T530
Registered Patent Attorney
http://www.intellectual.com
600, X61s, X220, X230, T530
I can't give you a definitive answer on that but I think that VPC 2007 gets access to the network, video, mouse, disks, etc. through the host OS. When I installed VPC 2007 on my desktop PC running Vista, I did not have to add any XP drivers.
Mark
X61T 7764-CTO, Core 2 Duo L7500 LV 1.6 GHz, 4 GB RAM, 120 GB Intel X25M SSD
Multiboot w/Grub4DOS -- Windows 10, MustangPE, PartedMagic
My ex: X41T (2005 - 2009)
X61T 7764-CTO, Core 2 Duo L7500 LV 1.6 GHz, 4 GB RAM, 120 GB Intel X25M SSD
Multiboot w/Grub4DOS -- Windows 10, MustangPE, PartedMagic
My ex: X41T (2005 - 2009)
At least VMware installs it´s own drivers for video, usb etc. I believe this is also the case with other VM machines.
IBM Lenovo Z61p | 15.4'' WUXGA | Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 2x 2.16GHz | 4 GB Kingston HyperX | Hitachi 7K500 500 GB + WD 1TB (USB) | ATI Mobility FireGL V5200 | ThinkPad Atheros a/b/g | Analog Devices AD1981HD | Win 7 x86 + ArchLinux 2009.08 x64 (number crunching)
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hellosailor
- Senior Member

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- Location: NY, NY
Marc, pardon me for pushing into VM territory here....but have you any experience with "snatching" a VM image of a machine?
I came across multiple references from MS that you could actually "snatch" a VM drive image of a working machine, and then simply transfer it back to a VM host machine. The idea is that, say your accounting system is creating problems but you can't take it offline or out of the accountant's office. So you "snatch" an image of the machine's drive, take it back to your VM host (server), mount it there and run it there for diagnostics--instead of trying to build a new image that matches the balky machine.
I pounded my head for days, couldn't get the image of the "other" machine to mount at all.
Would you have any idea how this can be done? I would like very much to be able to "snatch" my W2K machine with the few remaining programs that won't run under Vista, and mount it as a VM on my Vista machine. I just can't figure out quite how to do it!
I came across multiple references from MS that you could actually "snatch" a VM drive image of a working machine, and then simply transfer it back to a VM host machine. The idea is that, say your accounting system is creating problems but you can't take it offline or out of the accountant's office. So you "snatch" an image of the machine's drive, take it back to your VM host (server), mount it there and run it there for diagnostics--instead of trying to build a new image that matches the balky machine.
I pounded my head for days, couldn't get the image of the "other" machine to mount at all.
Would you have any idea how this can be done? I would like very much to be able to "snatch" my W2K machine with the few remaining programs that won't run under Vista, and mount it as a VM on my Vista machine. I just can't figure out quite how to do it!
"The only good silicon life form, is a dead silicon life form." [Will Rogers]
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
Sorry; I haven't heard of doing that. Perhaps someone else can jump in here to help out.
That sounds like something that you would do if the accounting system was running in a virtualized OS - just grab a copy of the virtual hard disk and open it in a VM. I'm not aware of a way to do that from a "real" (non-virtual) OS but maybe there is.I came across multiple references from MS that you could actually "snatch" a VM drive image of a working machine, and then simply transfer it back to a VM host machine. The idea is that, say your accounting system is creating problems but you can't take it offline or out of the accountant's office. So you "snatch" an image of the machine's drive, take it back to your VM host (server), mount it there and run it there for diagnostics--instead of trying to build a new image that matches the balky machine.
Mark
X61T 7764-CTO, Core 2 Duo L7500 LV 1.6 GHz, 4 GB RAM, 120 GB Intel X25M SSD
Multiboot w/Grub4DOS -- Windows 10, MustangPE, PartedMagic
My ex: X41T (2005 - 2009)
X61T 7764-CTO, Core 2 Duo L7500 LV 1.6 GHz, 4 GB RAM, 120 GB Intel X25M SSD
Multiboot w/Grub4DOS -- Windows 10, MustangPE, PartedMagic
My ex: X41T (2005 - 2009)
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carbon_unit
- Moderator Emeritus

- Posts: 2988
- Joined: Sat Apr 24, 2004 9:10 pm
- Location: South Central Iowa, USA
Here is how to do it in Virtualbox.
BTW, Vbox released a new version yesterday.
BTW, Vbox released a new version yesterday.
T60 2623-D7U, 3 GB Ram.
Dual boot XP and Linux Mint.
Registered linux user #160145
Dual boot XP and Linux Mint.
Registered linux user #160145
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hellosailor
- Senior Member

- Posts: 647
- Joined: Sat Jan 05, 2008 1:52 pm
- Location: NY, NY
Marc, grabbing a real hard drive, versus grabbing an image of it, should be the harder way.<G> Of course "image" and new boot procedures and whatever leave enough holes in simply trying to clone a hard drive, much less mount one, these days.
"The only good silicon life form, is a dead silicon life form." [Will Rogers]
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
Re: "downgrading" Ultimate to XP
Would installing WinXP from retail WinXP disks into a VM work as described earlier in this thread using a Vista 64-bit OS system with 4Gb of memory?
Two - T61p 15.4" WS T9300 2.5Ghz units, August 2008 08/08 Builds + Nvidia FX570M GPUs, One - T42 15" Flexview 1.8GHz + ATI GPU for travel, Two - T500 15.4" T9600 & T9400 CPUs with ATI HD3650 GPUs, One - Stupidly Fast W520 15.6" i7-2860QM + Nvidia 2000M GPU + Series 3 Dock w/USB 3.0
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hellosailor
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- Joined: Sat Jan 05, 2008 1:52 pm
- Location: NY, NY
Re: "downgrading" Ultimate to XP
Assuming the VMware or VPC works on Vista-64...sure. Once that is running, it pretty much should allow any OS that can run on the "virtual" hardware, to run. That means pretty much any version of Windows and most *NIX OSes as well, as I recall. There are some limits as to what hardware the virtual environment supports (or rather, what it can emulate) but I'd expect that to work without any problem.
"The only good silicon life form, is a dead silicon life form." [Will Rogers]
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
Re: "downgrading" Ultimate to XP
In answer to the VMware question - Yes, VMware 6.5.1 runs natively in Vista Business 64-bit and supports 32-bit operating system guests like XP Pro. I have that very configuration on my T61p 64-bit laptop. I also have Windows 98 and Windows 2000 virtual machines and they all run. I haven't yet loaded a Linux system on my T61, but I do have an Ubuntu Linux machine on my XP Pro desktop, so it is just a matter of time.
... JDH
... JDH
Re: "downgrading" Ultimate to XP
Can the WinXP VM run most MS oldies that are no longer supported under Vista .... like the older Media Player 6.4, etc?jdhurst wrote:In answer to the VMware question - Yes, VMware 6.5.1 runs natively in Vista Business 64-bit and supports 32-bit operating system guests like XP Pro. I have that very configuration on my T61p 64-bit laptop. I also have Windows 98 and Windows 2000 virtual machines and they all run. I haven't yet loaded a Linux system on my T61, but I do have an Ubuntu Linux machine on my XP Pro desktop, so it is just a matter of time.
... JDH
Two - T61p 15.4" WS T9300 2.5Ghz units, August 2008 08/08 Builds + Nvidia FX570M GPUs, One - T42 15" Flexview 1.8GHz + ATI GPU for travel, Two - T500 15.4" T9600 & T9400 CPUs with ATI HD3650 GPUs, One - Stupidly Fast W520 15.6" i7-2860QM + Nvidia 2000M GPU + Series 3 Dock w/USB 3.0
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hellosailor
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- Posts: 647
- Joined: Sat Jan 05, 2008 1:52 pm
- Location: NY, NY
Re: "downgrading" Ultimate to XP
"Can the WinXP VM "
AFAIK No such thing. There are multiple programs (Virtual PC, Virtual Server, VMWare) and each has different versions but I don't think any is specific for XP, although I'm sure there is a "last version recommended to run on XP" etc.
You'd have to read the docs and limits for whatever virtualization package you are running to find out what it can handle, but AFAIK they'll support pretty much anything older than they are--that ran on generic PC hardware to start with. Bear in mind that some OSes just didn't run on much hardware, i.e. many *NIX versions and earlier NT versions just wouldn't run on some hardware that worked just fine for Win95--and was only designed to run that one OS.
AFAIK No such thing. There are multiple programs (Virtual PC, Virtual Server, VMWare) and each has different versions but I don't think any is specific for XP, although I'm sure there is a "last version recommended to run on XP" etc.
You'd have to read the docs and limits for whatever virtualization package you are running to find out what it can handle, but AFAIK they'll support pretty much anything older than they are--that ran on generic PC hardware to start with. Bear in mind that some OSes just didn't run on much hardware, i.e. many *NIX versions and earlier NT versions just wouldn't run on some hardware that worked just fine for Win95--and was only designed to run that one OS.
"The only good silicon life form, is a dead silicon life form." [Will Rogers]
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.
Re: "downgrading" Ultimate to XP
Okay thanks .... I think just I'll stick with WinXP until Windows 7 rolls out (and even then wait until it's first SP1).hellosailor wrote:"Can the WinXP VM "
AFAIK No such thing. There are multiple programs (Virtual PC, Virtual Server, VMWare) and each has different versions but I don't think any is specific for XP, although I'm sure there is a "last version recommended to run on XP" etc.
You'd have to read the docs and limits for whatever virtualization package you are running to find out what it can handle, but AFAIK they'll support pretty much anything older than they are--that ran on generic PC hardware to start with. Bear in mind that some OSes just didn't run on much hardware, i.e. many *NIX versions and earlier NT versions just wouldn't run on some hardware that worked just fine for Win95--and was only designed to run that one OS.
Then again, maybe not
http://blogs.computerworld.com/why_xp_o ... _windows_7
Two - T61p 15.4" WS T9300 2.5Ghz units, August 2008 08/08 Builds + Nvidia FX570M GPUs, One - T42 15" Flexview 1.8GHz + ATI GPU for travel, Two - T500 15.4" T9600 & T9400 CPUs with ATI HD3650 GPUs, One - Stupidly Fast W520 15.6" i7-2860QM + Nvidia 2000M GPU + Series 3 Dock w/USB 3.0
Re: "downgrading" Ultimate to XP
Apart from the hardware part, this article didn´t really convince me. Then again the only problem with the hardware argument is that by logical extension I should dislike XP because it wouldn´t be able to run my old 386... And in fact I dislike it (-> see my signature) 
IBM Lenovo Z61p | 15.4'' WUXGA | Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 2x 2.16GHz | 4 GB Kingston HyperX | Hitachi 7K500 500 GB + WD 1TB (USB) | ATI Mobility FireGL V5200 | ThinkPad Atheros a/b/g | Analog Devices AD1981HD | Win 7 x86 + ArchLinux 2009.08 x64 (number crunching)
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