krishna
One method to create a recovery drive in Windows 8 is to open the Charms bar. Once it is open, one should search for "create recovery drive." This will open a visual of the recovery drive. Next, one should click on the "crate recovery drive" under the settings. This will then start the recovery drive wizard.
Create two partitions in ur hard drive and install Windows '98 on Drive C and install Windows 2000 on Drive D to another partition.
To do this, you must boot from the Windows 7 disc or USB thumb drive. To do this, enter your BIOS, which can usually be done by pressing Delete or F8 when it is booting, or if you have a Dell by changing the boot priority right on the startup screen. After this, hot the reboot button and it should take you right into the Windows 7 setup. Make sure after this is done, you change the boot priority back to your hard drive first.
To flash Windows onto your computer, you can create a bootable USB drive using the Windows Media Creation Tool. Then, restart your computer and boot from the USB drive to begin the Windows installation process. Follow the on-screen instructions to complete the installation.
It can be any version of Windows 7 (Starter, Home Basic, Home Premium, Professional or Ultimate) but if you want to keep your stuff buy an 'upgrade' version of the DVD. If your computer has become unstable, or cannot boot into Windows, choose the full install as this will install a fresh copy onto your computer. (Only choose this if you want to wipe all the stuff off your hard drive) but if you do all your stuff will be in a folder called Windows.old I recommend Windows 7 Ultimate but it is the most expensive option. Windows 7 Starter is the cheapest but doesn't have the full features of Ultimate. Most people go for Home Premium. (I've got Windows 7 Ultimate Beta)
you need to create a partition on your hard drive then put 7 on the partition and then get easy bcd 1.7.2
It depends on which operating system you want to boot on your flash drive. I have been using an application called Firesage|Bootsage to create a Windows 7 installer flash drive or a WinPE bootable environment, and it seems to work very well. It runs under Windows XP as well as Windows 7. http://firesage.com/bootsage
Install Win XP on the first hard drive, then install Vista from Xp and on question about "what kind of installation do you want to have?" Answer "separate" installation. When it asks you "which hard drive are you going to use?" Choose the second one. Vista will create a boot list automatically.
Take a look at an application called Bootsage. It runs under Windows XP as well as Windows 7, and automagically creates a bootable Win7 flash drive. http://firesage.com/bootsage
It depends on which operating system you want to boot on your flash drive. I have been using Bootsage to create a Windows 7 installer flash drive or a WinPE bootable environment, and it seems to work very well. It runs under Windows XP as well as Windows 7. http://firesage.com/bootsage
I would suggest installing windows on one hard drive, then installing ubuntu on the same hard drive. Use the other hard drive for the backups (partition it).
If you’ve ever had to reinstall your operating system after a bad computer crash or after being infected with a virus, you know that the process can be time consuming and tedious. Not only do you have to find your Windows Vista Ultimate DVD and activation codes, but you also have to download hundreds of updates after Windows installs. On top of that, you will have to install all of the service packs in order to get Windows Vista Ultimate back to working order. Only then can you begin to reinstall your other programs and restore your backup data. One way to make the process faster is by slipstreaming Windows Vista Ultimate. Slipstreaming refers to placing the operating system, relevant drivers, and all updates onto one disk that can be used to install Windows Vista Ultimate. By slipstreaming your installation DVD, you can cut your installation time by half. Before you get started, you will need a genuine copy of Windows Vista Ultimate and a copy of vLite, a program that will let you create the DVD. Also, you will need all of the Vista service packs, .NET Framework 2.0, and Windows Automated Installation Kit. These can all be downloaded directly from Microsoft. Finally, you will need a blank DVD and a DVD writing drive. Once you have downloaded all the programs and files that you need, you will need to install vLite, .NET Framework, and Windows Automated Installation Kit. Follow the directions that come with the software. Once you have done that, start vLite and place your Windows Vista Ultimate DVD into the drive. After that, choose Task and then choose Slipstream and Bootable ISO in order to start the process. Next, the program will prompt you to browse to the location where you have saved the service packs. Find the first service pack, Windows Vista SP1, and point the program to its location. Repeat for SP2 and SP3. Now you are ready to make the DVD. Press the Burn button to create the ISO or DVD. Whether you choose to make an ISO file or a DVD is up to you. ISO files can be used to make multiple DVDs or placed onto bootable flash drives, while DVDs require a DVD drive. After a few minutes, the disk or the ISO will be ready for you to use the next time that you have to reinstall Windows Vista Ultimate.