Thursday, February 25, 2010

How to Upgrade from Windows 7 RC to F...

How to Upgrade from Windows 7 RC to Final

Windows 7 
Upgrade

So the Windows 7 deadline is fast approaching. Officially, there's no way to upgrade from your RC to retail. But in the real world, it only requires a Windows 7 ISO image and editing a single file in Notepad.

Here are the quick text instructions. After the jump you can find detailed (and possibly really boring) screenshots.
  1. Get the MS USB/DVD Download Tools
  2. Put your Windows 7 Utlimate ISO on a USB stick. Note that it must be Ultimate, and that it has to correspond to the one you've got installed (x86 or x64).
  3. Edit sources\cversion.ini and change MinClient from 7233.0 to 7100. Save and close.
  4. Install from within Windows so that it upgrades (installing by booting from the USB will give you a fresh install and defeat what we're trying to do here).
And if you'd like to see the excruciatingly detailed screenshots, keep on reading.

Make sure your USB device is large enough. It actually has to be empty, as I later discovered.



Point the USB/DVD Download Tool at your ISO file. (Must be Windows 7 Ultimate, because the RC was Ultimate).



Click USB device here.



Click Begin copying.



This is where you get the alert if your USB drive isn't empty. If you get this, select Erase USB Device (obviously, back it up first if you want to).

Now the DVD tool does its thing:






Now go to the USB drive, and sources\cversion.ini. Double-click it to open it in notepad.



Change this:


To this:


Save and close. You can now upgrade your Windows 7 RC with the Final version by installing it from within Windows.
Sponsored Links
Get 3 Home Alarm Quotes. CompareRates, Service & Get The Best Deal.
Free $850 ADT Home Security System.Limited Time Offer Ends Soon!
Get a Free Home Alarm Systemw/ Only a $99 Install Fee! Hurry
jobs & resumes
iPhone / Android Developer

Bump Technologies, Inc. - Mountain View, CA (4 weeks ago)

See More Relevant Jobs ›

Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)

Add your comments


The iZotope 64-bit SRC™ utilizes a hy...

The iZotope 64-bit SRC™ utilizes a hyrbrid algorithm providing the highest quality and most customizable resampling available on the market today.
 
Sample Rate Conversion (SRC) is a necessary process when converting material from one sampling rate (such as studio quality 192kHz) to another rate (such as CD quality 44.1kHz). It is common to record and edit in high sampling rates since higher rates allow higher frequencies to be represented. For example, a 192kHz audio sample can represent frequencies up to 96kHz whereas a 44.1kHz audio sample can only represent frequencies up to 22.05kHz, also known as the Nyquist frequency. 

When reducing the sampling rate, or downsampling, it is crucial to remove the frequencies that cannot be represented at the lower sampling rate. Leaving frequencies above this point causes aliasing. Aliasing can be heard as the frequencies in an inaudible range are shifted into an audible range causing distortion and noise. 


With Zotope 64-bit SRC's steep low-pass filter, users can completely avoid the common aliasing artifacts while maintaining the maximum frequency content.
 
iZotope 64-bit SRC features a hybrid ringing control enabling a compromise between the standard pre-ringing of a linear phase filter and the post-ringing of a minimum phase filter. A continuous control morphs the algorithm from a linear phase filter to a minimum phase filter (shown below in an intermediate step). 


The intermediate design also maintains a linear phase response in the audible range.
 
Sound card drivers


Professional audio production, broadcast (editors, mastering, trackers, file format converters)


Audio encoders, codecs, decoders 


A/D and D/A converters 


Scientific applications for single-dimensional signals


 
The key step of sample rate conversion is the quality of the low-pass filter design. The crucial aspects include a flat pass-band, steep transition-band, high suppression in the stop-band, and minimal ringing. The careful attention of iZotope's SRC protects against the loss of data, aliasing, noise, and unwanted ringing artifacts that plague other implementations.