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Vista;l Windows Mail

Discussion in 'Windows Vista' started by denmarfl, Oct 20, 2009.

  1. denmarfl

    denmarfl Guest

    I will be doing an in-place upgrade from Vista Home Prem to Windows 7. I
    have been using Windows Mail which is part of Vista. When I do the Upgrade
    to Windows 7;

    1) The Vista OS will deleted and replaced with Windows 7.....?
    2) Will Windows Mail be deleted since it is part of the Vista OS? I know
    Windows Live Mail is available but have had no reason to make the switch.
    3) Will the Upgrade have a feature where it saves Vista so if you encounter
    issues you can revert back to Vista? (Or will Windows restore do that?)
     
  2. Leroy

    Leroy Guest

  3. R. C. White

    R. C. White Guest

    Hi, denmarfl.
    <!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > I will be doing an in-place upgrade from Vista Home Prem to Windows 7.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    No, you will not. The term "in-place upgrade" is out of place here. :>(

    An in-place upgrade, also known as a repair install, means an upgrade from
    WinXP to WinXP, for example. In other words, it simply re-installs the
    current operating system. It is not an upgrade to a newer OS. In-place
    upgrades were quite common in WinXP as a method to re-install corrupted
    system files, but the procedure changed in Vista and the technique no longer
    works as it did in WinXP.
    <!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > have been using Windows Mail which is part of Vista. When I do the
    > Upgrade
    > to Windows 7;<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    Windows Mail is an integral part of Vista. It can't be deleted from Vista
    and will not run on any other Windows version. (A few persistent users have
    got it to run in Windows 7, but this is not supported. I've not tried it
    myself.)

    Windows 7 contains NO email or newsreader program. Windows Live Mail is
    available at no charge from , but it is not
    included in Windows 7 or any other version of Windows. Thus Win7 users can
    choose to install WLM or Outlook (NOT Outlook Express) or any third-party
    applications of their choice.
    <!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > 3) Will the Upgrade have a feature where it saves Vista so if you
    > encounter
    > issues you can revert back to Vista? (Or will Windows restore do that?)<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    No. Many users install Win7 into a separate partition so that they can
    evaluate it and customize it before they delete Vista from their computer.
    Windows System Restore will restore only the Windows version which was
    running when the Restore point was created AND it must be the same version
    that is currently running.

    RC
    --
    R. C. White, CPA
    San Marcos, TX
    rc@grandecom.net
    Microsoft Windows MVP
    Windows Live Mail 2009 (14.0.8089.0726) in Win7 Ultimate x64

    "denmarfl" <denmarfl@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
    news:0525C12D-5FE7-4786-8679-9E1D9A60A9BF@microsoft.com...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > I will be doing an in-place upgrade from Vista Home Prem to Windows 7. I
    > have been using Windows Mail which is part of Vista. When I do the
    > Upgrade
    > to Windows 7;
    >
    > 1) The Vista OS will deleted and replaced with Windows 7.....?
    > 2) Will Windows Mail be deleted since it is part of the Vista OS? I know
    > Windows Live Mail is available but have had no reason to make the switch.
    > 3) Will the Upgrade have a feature where it saves Vista so if you
    > encounter
    > issues you can revert back to Vista? (Or will Windows restore do that?) <!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
     

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