by Narrock » Tue Dec 06, 2011 8:16 am
Okay, here's the deal: I've built many computers for myself, my family and friends for the last 15 years, and I'm running into a head-scratcher for about the 2nd time in 15 years. Anyway, I pulled an older system out of the garage and did a few upgrades so my wife can play wow too. I also upgraded my main system.. got a 300 gig velociraptor 10,000 rpm HD, and put my old 80 gig drive in the old systwm I",m building for my wife. I installed win 7 64bit on the new HD for my main system, but forgot that I already used that license on the 80 gig drive I'm putting in my wife"s system. So naturally, Microsoft detected that and I get the error message "this is not a genuine version of windows... blah blah" constantly and I get a lot of errors with other applications like Mumble (a better voice chat program than Ventrilo) etc. Ok, no problem, I'll just format the hard drive and install my old windows XP os, right? Wrong. Microsoft parried this idea by first blocking me access to my own bios. They set some kind of administrator pw. No problem, I just popped out the battery from the mobo for half an hour to give the stored electricity to discharge from the system and reset the bios. Succcess! I now have access to the bios. I set "first bootable drive" to CD Rom, 2nd bootable to HD, hit F10 to "save and continue", popped in my windows xp disc, rebooted the system, and began the formatting process. /FAIL. When I get to the screen where you select the partition to install the os on, it"s giving me the message "you cannot install on that partition" or something like that. There's only two partitions you can choose. I tried them both, and even tried creating a new partition... Nothing works. Halp!
“The more I study science the more I believe in God.” -- Albert Einstein