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windows 8.1 to windows 7 downgrade?
When upgrading from windows 7 to windows 8.1, it put all of my documents and such in a folder named "windows.old", when downgrading back to windows 7, will it do that again?
update---
i didnt need to back anything up, as the installer did in fact place all of my files in a folder named "windows.old" on the C drive
5 Answers
- GeeLv 47 years agoFavorite Answer
Here are the instructions which tell you what you will be doing with the "windows.old" folder.
Uninstall Windows 8 and restore Windows 7
1 First, while in Windows 8 Developer Preview, go to Computer, in the Hard Disk Drives area, double-click Local Disk C:, and determine whether the Windows.OLD folder exists.
Important: If the Windows.OLD folder does not exist, you cannot continue with this process to restore the previous Windows installation to this computer.
2 Right-click the Windows.OLD folder, and click Properties to determine whether the Windows.OLD folder is smaller that the free space available in the Local Disk C:.
Note: If the Windows.OLD folder is twice the large of the free available space in the Local Disk C:, you may not be able to restore Windows 7.
3 Next, insert the Windows 7 DVD or USB bootable drive in your computer, restart and then, when you are prompted, press any key to start the installation process.
4 In the Install Windows box, select your settings for language, time, etc., and then click Next.
5 In the next step click Repair your computer in the bottom-left corner of the window.
6 Now, in the System Recovery Options window, click Windows 8 Developer Preview operating system, and then click Next.
7 In the System Recovery Options window, click Command Prompt – The command prompt is the tool you are going to use to restore Windows 7.
You may start in X:\Sources>, here you need to enter the drive letter of the Windows 8 installation drive — this should be C: but this wasn’t my case. I actually had to test letter-by-letter, until I landed in the correct drive letter, which for me was D:. — How did I know that it was D:? Because each time I tried different letters I got the message: The system cannot find the drive specified. Then when I successfully landed on D:, I typed the command dir and all the Windows 8 installation files, plus the Windows.OLD were there.
8 Type the following commands at the command prompt:
Type the following and press Enter:
ren Windows Windows.8
Type the following and press Enter:
ren “Program Files” “Program Files.8″
Type the following and press Enter:
ren “Users” “Users.8″
9 Copy the contents or move the contents of the Windows.OLD folder:
Type the following and press Enter:
move /y D:\windows.old\windows D:\
Type the following and press Enter:
move /y “D:\windows.old\program files” D:\
Type the following and press Enter:
move /y D:\windows.old\users D:\
Important: Change D:\ in the command described above with the drive letter that applies to your Windows 8 installation drive.
10 Go to the Windows 7 installation media drive. This step is a bit tricky, at the beginning I thought that X:\ was the drive letter for the Windows 7 installation media, but it turned out that it wasn’t. You’ll need to scan once again, like in step 8, for the drive letter of the CD/DVD-ROM drive; in my case was E:\. You’ll know if it is the CD/DVD-ROM drive, because when you type the command dir you’ll see these files and folders: boot, bootmgr, setup.ext, sources, upgrade, etc.
11 Now you need to restore the boot sector for the previous Windows installation.
Type the following command and press Enter:
boot\bootsect /nt60 D:
Important: Replace D: with drive letter of the Windows 8 Developer Preview installation.
12 Last, type Exit to close the command prompt and click Restart. Don’t forget to remove the Windows 7 DVD or USB bootable drive from your computer. And you are now done! You just uninstall Windows 8 and restore Windows 7.
***************************************
If everything went well, but you forgot to backup some of the files, you may find them in the renamed folders, open the Run command and type: C:\Users.8 to find documents and files, and C:\Windows.8 to find the previous installation files of Windows 8. Also note that applications installed while you had Windows 8 may stop working after the process.
Now that you are back to Windows 7 you can just be done, but if you want to tweak the system a bit more, you can remove the Windows Developer Preview entry from the boot menu. To do this, go to Start , type and open the Run command, type msconfig, navigate to the Boot tab, select Windows Developer Preview (recovered) (C:\Windows.8), click Delete, Apply and then OK.
To reclaim the space used by the Windows 8 installation, you’ll need to repeat steps 3 to 6. If you get the message that there are some problems found, just click Cancel — in the next step we’ll make that go away –, then click Command Prompt and type the following:
rd windows.old /s /q
rd windows.8 /s /q
rd “program files.8″ /s /q
rd users.8 /s /q
rd /$windows.~bt /s /q
exit
Now click Restart to finish
I noticed that after you do this, Internet Explorer, Windows Explorer, and Windows Media Player pinned links might break, but don’t worry these applications still in your system, just remove the blank pinned links, open the applications and pinned them back to the taskbar, if you need to.
Last, if you didn’t like to see the label Windows Developer Preview (C:\Windows): Current OS; Default OS, as the label for Windows 7 in the msconfig, you can easy change this back to the label Windows 7 by downloading and installing an application called EasyBCD. Launch the application, click Edit Boot Menu, select Windows Developer Preview, click Rename and type Windows 7, and finally click Save Settings.
- tumbleweed_biffLv 77 years ago
No. You need to back up all of your personal data. I saw something which suggests that you can use the Win 8 Easy transfer wizard and restore it to a Win 7 install, but I can't guarantee that. So I would suggest making the Windows Easy Transfer back-up and then also manually backing up your personal files in case you can't restore the Easy Transfer file onto a Win 7 machine.
During the downgrade process you have to go through a full, clean install of Win 7 and you will want to wipe the drive to start over. Before beginning this process, make certain you have made a list of all your hardware components and downloaded the drivers you will need for them onto a flash drive or similar. Also make sure that you have a complete list of installed applications and any license keys you will need.
- chrisjbscLv 77 years ago
NO. There is NO downgrade of Windows from 8 to 7. There is only: reinstall and wipe the disk.
Therefore, there is no protection for existing files.
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