All the features of Home Premium are included in Ultimate. There is no reason to go backwards.
THere is no such OS called windows premium., but in vista there are many flavours called vista basic, home premium and vista ultimate. In these variations the higher you go the more extra features u get and obviously the more you pay for it. LIke vista basic does have windows aero and home premium does not have dream scenes, bit locker etc which ultimate has., but the basic OS is the same. :)
You can, but you have pay for windows 7 pro.
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)
I'm not sure what you mean by loader but to activate windows 7 Home Premium all you have to do is open the start menu, right click on Computer and click properties. Then click activate windows and you should be good to go.
First, Microsoft does not have a "Home Basic" edition of Windows 7 (Home Basic was one of the Vista editions). The most basic edition of Windows 7 is called "Windows 7 Starter" and is only available (at least in the US) on certain small "netbook"-type computers, which may be a bit underpowered for the Home Premium edition. (Note that I'm not saying that any particular one is, just that it's possible.)That said, Windows 7 has a feature called "Windows Anytime Upgrade" that allows you to go from a "lower" edition of Windows 7 (such as Starter) to a "higher" edition (such as Home Premium). The cost is around $80 for the Starter to Home Premium upgrade directly from Microsoft; you may be able to get it for slightly less from retailers such as Amazon.com.If you actually have Windows Vista Home Basic, the upgrade price to Windows 7 Home Premium (again, directly from Microsoft) is about $120.
which version of Windows Home Premium are you referring to Windows Vista Home Premium Windows 7 Home Premium which version Windows Ultimate are you referring to Windows Vista Ultimate Windows 7 Ultimate Windows 8 doesnt include Home Premium Home Basic and Starter the Home User will use Windows 8 and or RT for the Ultimate and Enterprise and small business users Windows 8 Pro there will be no ultimate Windows 8 Pro succeeds Windows 7 Ultimate i dont think you can upgrade from Windows 7 Ultimate to Windows 8 Pro
You will need to go to uninstall programs from the control panel to uninstall Windows 7 Home Premium. You will no longer need Windows 7 once you have upgraded to Win 8 Pro.
ok the main difference between the two lies in the 64 bit. For most PC users Vista Home Premium 32 bit (which is the regular one) is fine, but if you are a gamer or have more than 4 GB of RAM then 64-Bit is the wayto go. This is because the 32-bit versions of windows will only recognize 3.25 GB of RAM.
You go Start > Computer. Then right click on the DVD drive and click eject.
Yes I use it all the time on Windows vista home and Vista Ultimate with out any issues.
Yes, Command and Conquer: Red Alert can work on Windows 7 Home Premium, but you may need to run it in compatibility mode. Right-click the game's executable file, select "Properties," then go to the "Compatibility" tab to set it to run as if it's on an older version of Windows, such as Windows XP. Additionally, using patches or community mods can help improve compatibility and performance on newer systems.
Either buy a copy of windows 7 ultimite from a local computer store or in your computer go into windows anytime upgrade and do it form there.