You cannot create an installation disk from an XP install.
If it were possible it would also likely be a violation of the user agreement.
Windows Genuine Advantage (WGA) works on any Windows Operating System. It works best if the user has a high speed connection. The purpose of WGA is to ensure that a user's copy of a Windows operating system is legitimate for automatic updates and other downloads.
If you have a copy of Office for Windows then the Windows operating system will be required to run it. If you have a copy of Office for Macs then Mac OS X will be required to run it.
you have to restart your whole operating system and then it will revert to the old operating system. you have to restart your whole operating system and then it will revert to the old operating system.
Yes, it is possible. When you run the setup program, setup will ask you whether to install a fresh copy or to repair the existing copy of Windows.
maybe the windows xp operating system is not genuine
Yes, you can if you have a copy of the CD saved somewhere on your hard drive.
Microsoft Windows Operating Systems have been the most forged software of all time. In order to make sure your copy is legitamate one must validate it by visiting microsoft's website or calling their hotline.
Extract them to an mp4 format then use a windows operating system and copy paste it there in the folder manually
Format the hard drive using a standalone program or installation procedure of another operating system such as Unix/Linux. You cannot do it from a running copy of Windows.
Windows 7 is the computers operating system. To get a full copy will cost between 180.00 and 200.00 depending on where it is purchased it and if it is full version or upgrade.
You can't use your operating system anymore. Just like any other software when it expires. It's unusable.
The easiest way to do this is to have an operating system that can read and write the file system of other operating systems. For example, although Ubuntu and many other Linux distributions use the ext3 and ext4 file systems, they can read and write to the NTFS file system used by Windows. However, Windows cannot read ext4. If you do not have an OS that can read files this way, you can alternatively install software that allows you to read partitions of different types. Most notably, Ext2Read can be installed on a Windows machine to read ext2/3/4 partitions (see related links). Another option is to create a separate partition on your hard drive that is formatted as a type that both your OS's can read, then move the files you want to copy into that partitions.