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Hi, I have Dell Latitude E6410 that I got from my university 5 years ago. I have previously reinstalled the windows 7 on it using DVDs. Now, I have upgraded to Windows 10 and after getting the anniversary update I am having problems with wi-fi and camera. Windows 7 Professional ISO download 64-Bit is the ISO you want to go with in most cases. All modern PC’s sold within the last 6 years should be capable of installing from a Windows 7 Professional 64-Bit ISO. Need to find win 7 pro oa - posted in Windows Vista and Windows 7: Hi, Im going to try to make this sound as less complicated as possible. I have a hp all-in-one pc that originally came with win 7 pro oa (according to my coa sticker located on the bottom of the computer).
My new ThinkPad came with Windows 7 Professional installed on the HDD, but no Win7 installation disc. I want to install a new SSD and perform a Clean Install of Windows 7. I have a legit Windows 7 Home Premium installation disc and license/key (bought a 3-pack last year, have one license left). Can I just use this disc to install Windows 7 onto the SSD? If so, will I be forced to use my final license or can I re-use the product key that was shipped with my ThinkPad and Win7 Professional? All of my previous laptops have shipped with Windows installation discs, so I've never really had an issue like this before.
Any advice will be appreciated! You can backup your Windows 7 Pro activation on your new thinkpad and restore it later after clean install using ABR (Activation Backup and Restore) here's the you can switch from 32bit to 64bit vice versa, using the same activation as long as it has the same edition (pro 32bit to pro 64bit, home premium 64bit to home premium 32bit) provided you have the installation disk/.iso image.
I find ABR tool effective instead of entering win7 key and activate it over internet or calling microsoft, especially if you clean installing windows in regular basis. You should be able to create the Windows Recovery disk 4 DVD (1 boot + 3 data). Pull out your original drive, put in your new drive, boot and recover. Or you can get one of disk cloning software like Acronis Disk Director, make a windows repair disk (important), clone your drive, remove the original drive, repair the cloned drive (sometime the boot stuff is not clone correctly).
I have not found reinstalling everything from scratch (Microsoft Win7 install) is really useful, unless you have a distribution with all the patches already merged in. You can always remove / uninstall the cruft that lenovo has added that you don't need. Some things like WinDVD cannot be installed by download. In any case reinstalling took me 2 hours.
I purchased a used thinkpad T420 and the previous owner installed windows 10. I hate windows 10 so want to delete it. In the past I have used the win 7 pro x64 ISO which is no longer available. I do have another 420 pro x64 which I made recovery disks when new so I have those.
I used the recovery disk to overwrite windows 10 but it installed all the lenovo bloatware and simple tap, etc. I do not want those programs.
Windows 7 Pro Oa Lenovo Singapore Iso Download
Is there any way to do a clean install with the recovery disks? Does anyone have an iso of this file they could upload? I know I can do a torrent installation but would not like to go that route. RealBlackStuff wrote:Recovery disks are just that: recovery of the previous (ex-factory) state.
Since you already have recovery disks, you can/should delete your recovery partition. Uninstall/delete all your unwanted bloatware, then take an image and use that for future re-installs.
Thanks but that is not what I want to do. I have 2 T420's. One I just got used off ebay and came with windows 10 and I want to take it back to 7. I also have (since 2012) another T420 which I made recovery disks from. I did a clean install on the first (ebay) computer using the second computers disks and every thing worked fine except for the lenovo bloatware and apps like simple tap.
Therefore I wanted to do a clean install. I called lenovo and they will sell me disks for $69 or a years worth of support for $199. Re: 'clean install' From your description, it sounds like you would like to (re)install a 'retail' version of Windows 7. From my understanding those.ISOs are still available here: Per the download page, you need to have a valid COA and it will only allow access to the version of Windows the COA is for. It's also my understanding that the ones attached to the system by the factory should not work in this case but it won't hurt to give it a try. I haven't personally installed W7 using this method on any of my systems so I could be wrong.
Any 'recovery' or 'restore' disk set you get from Lenovo will have their 'bloatware' on it. In those cases, the previous suggestion applies: install it, run Windows Update until all critical/high priority patches are applied, use Add/Remove Programs utility or the bloatware's own uninstall routine to get rid of it, install whatever software you normally use and once you're happy, make a complete system backup using a third-party backup/clone tool and use that image to recover from. You will also have a PM from me in a few minutes. Rkawakami wrote:re: 'clean install' From your description, it sounds like you would like to (re)install a 'retail' version of Windows 7. From my understanding those.ISOs are still available here: Per the download page, you need to have a valid COA and it will only allow access to the version of Windows the COA is for. It's also my understanding that the ones attached to the system by the factory should not work in this case but it won't hurt to give it a try. I haven't personally installed W7 using this method on any of my systems so I could be wrong.
Any 'recovery' or 'restore' disk set you get from Lenovo will have their 'bloatware' on it. In those cases, the previous suggestion applies: install it, run Windows Update until all critical/high priority patches are applied, use Add/Remove Programs utility or the bloatware's own uninstall routine to get rid of it, install whatever software you normally use and once you're happy, make a complete system backup using a third-party backup/clone tool and use that image to recover from.
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You will also have a PM from me in a few minutes. Ray, I tried your link and it works for the Win7.iso download but it doesn't have an English version. There are 30 or more available languages but English is not an option. Before I waste hours getting nowhere, can you guys please advise me if I can create a recovery CD or flash drive image from my T420 and install onto the X230 I have just bought with blank HDD and SSD?
The T420 has Win7Pro64 SP1 and both the T420 and X230 have OEM COA stickers for that version. FWIW, I tried to order recovery media from Lenovo but the ordering webpage froze on me and I don't expect that to be a quick or promising route.
If that fails I could try to use the standard media as you covered earlier (I'll download later today) with the OEM COA and a phone call if necessary, but I feel the recovery image route sounds the most likely to succeed. I can deal with bloatware but I just need the installation. The new SSD took a while to arrive but installation on my X230 and activation was clean and easy: 1.
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Downloaded Win7 iso file, plus 'Windows7-USB-DVD-Download-Tool-Installer-en-US.exe' from Microsoft 2. Copied ISO to blank USB drive with the MS tool to create a bootable drive (could have made a disk but why bother and the X230 would need an external optical drive) & insert into X230 3. Start up X230 - the boot process allows you to interrupt booting and select a different boot drive, no need to change BIOS settings 4. Install Windows (nice and fast with SSD), type in COA from under battery and be told that I have 3 days to activate 5. Find and install Ethernet driver, go through a few Windows Update cycles, download drivers package from Lenovo - could have manually installed drivers at this point but instead: 6.
Download, install and run Lenovo System Update and let it update all drivers etc 7. Activate Windows: Computer-Properties-Windows activation, dialled the automated phone service, told it I have a volume license agreement, gave it my mobile number and received a link by SMS, went through activation codes as instructed and success No need for recovery disks or original Lenovo Win7 CD - it all worked with a vanilla iso and the OEM COA under the battery. Thanks for the tips RBS and other guys.