5-6 gig Min? no apps installed 20-30 recommended at min 40-80 preferred
If it has the minimum RAM and hard drive space, you can.
it depends on which one you buy
Windows seven home basic, or more commonly known as windows 7 starter is mainly used for netbooks that don't have very much RAM and hard drive space, and alos maybe not as much processing power. If you have a notebook laptop or a desktop PC consider Windows 7 Home Premium. Windows 7 starter lacks some features that home premium has like windows aero's transparency to save RAM and hard drive space for lower end computers.
I use a Windows 7 HDD drive in my home computer. It is fast, and reliable.
Windows Vista Home Premium has the same features that Home Basic has, in addition to the following features that Home Basic does not have: * Windows Aero interface * Windows Mobility Center * Tablet PC Support * Windows Meeting Space * Windows SideShow * Windows Media Center * Scheduled Backup * Windows DVD Maker * Assorted Games * Windows Movie Maker
go to microsoft.com and download the Windows XP iso file and burn it to a CD or DVD dependin on what it says, then boot it to your hard drive
It depends on what edition you have and what you enable, but my Vista installation (Vista Home Premium) took 10GB of space.
This means that you have chosen to install an Office 2010 Click-to-Run suite, such as Office Starter 2010, Office Starter To-Go, Office Home & Student, or Office Home & Business. These products are based on Application Virtualization technology. The Q:\ drive is the virtual file system drive where virtualized apps "live" in the file system namespace. The Q:\ drive is not a real drive; it has no space and is not accessible from Windows Explorer or "My Computer".
This means that you have chosen to install an Office 2010 Click-to-Run suite, such as Office Starter 2010, Office Starter To-Go, Office Home & Student, or Office Home & Business. These products are based on Application Virtualization technology. The Q:\ drive is the virtual file system drive where virtualized apps "live" in the file system namespace. The Q:\ drive is not a real drive; it has no space and is not accessible from Windows Explorer or "My Computer".
Click the folder and press delete.
Not directly. You can format the hard drive and install Windows XP cleanly. You can upgrade directly to Windows XP Professional (which is more expensive).
I've got an Intel 240GB SSD and its taking up 140GB. I've installed twice and put on the regular things like antivirus but haven't yet even put on Office. Seems like a lot of space needed to me. June 2012