Mikey wrote:
> On 8/6/2011 1:25 AM, Yousuf Khan wrote:
>> On 05/08/2011 4:29 PM, Mikey wrote:
>>> I've got a Toshiba flaptop running Win7 Home Premium 64 bit. It tries to
>>> download it. The byte counter never advances, and after 18-20 minutes,
>>> it times out and when I retry, it fails with error code 800B0100. I run
>>> the tool that's supposed to fix that, it says it succeeded, I retry the
>>> SP1 install.
>>>
>>> The cycle repeats.
>>
>> I had a similar problem several months ago, the only solution at the
>> time was to
>> stick the original Win7 install disk in and do an "In-Place Upgrade"
>> install of
>> Windows 7, which basically brings you back to an original unpatched
>> Windows 7 state,
>> but keeps all of your programs installed (major bonus, don't need to
>> reinstall the
>> applications). After you do this, then you immediately apply the full
>> SP1 on it,
>> before applying any other patches to it.
>>
>> I believe Microsoft came out with some patches that fixed this problem
>> a few months
>> after I no longer needed it. Here's a description of these patches:
>>
>> Patch Tuesday updates fix a trio of Windows 7 SP1 glitches | ZDNet
>> http://www.zdnet.com/blog/bott/patch...-glitches/3286
>>
>>
>>
>> I have my doubts that these patches will fix anything either, judging
>> by the quality
>> of Microsoft patches in the past, but I'm just cynical, they may work
>> perfectly for you.
>>
>> If it doesn't work, then you'll have to do the In-Place Upgrade
>> Install method I
>> mentioned above. It takes a while to do this one, but it makes your
>> system pristine,
>> it may end up fixing other problems for you.
>>
>> Yousuf Khan
>
> Your suggestion sounds like a good one. Unfortunately, I have no Win CD.
> It came pre-installed, no media.
>
> I do have a licensed copy of Win7 Pro, but I don't think that would
> repair a Win7 Home install, would it?
>
When I did my SP1 upgrade, the first thing I did, was a backup.
That's so, if it got stuck or got stuck in a loop, it would be
possible to recover. I made a sector by sector image, so nothing
could get lost. That was my fallback plan.
I didn't do mine via Windows Update, instead preferring to download
the necessary file. The download ends up being much much larger
than it needs to be, by doing that, but the advantage is, if
there is a failure, you're not paying for the same download
sequence over and over again. Your misery comes in smaller bursts.
Windows 7 (and Windows Server 2008 R2) Service Pack 1 (KB976932)
http://www.microsoft.com/download/en...s.aspx?id=5842
7601.17514.101119-1850_Update_Sp_Wave1-GRMSP1.1_DVD.iso 1.0 GB
Windows_Win7SP1. ... .AMD64CHK.Symbols.msi 262.0 MB
Windows_Win7SP1. ... .AMD64FRE.Symbols.msi 287.0 MB
Windows_Win7SP1. ... .IA64CHK.Symbols.msi 241.0 MB
Windows_Win7SP1. ... .IA64FRE.Symbols.msi 193.0 MB
Windows_Win7SP1. ... .X86CHK.Symbols.msi 294.0 MB
Windows_Win7SP1. ... .X86FRE.Symbols.msi 330.0 MB
windows6.1-KB976932-IA64.exe 511.0 MB
windows6.1-KB976932-X64.exe 903.0 MB
windows6.1-KB976932-X86.exe 537.0 MB
You should find the DVD size represents the combination of several
of the other files.
The symbol files, are used for running a debugger. So you
don't need those.
The three at the bottom, are for Itanium computers, 64 bit OS, 32 bit OS
respectively. People don't usually have Itanium computers as a desktop,
leaving the two bottom files as the important ones. I downloaded the 903.0MB
one and installed with that on my 64 bit Windows 7 install. It's about
nine times larger than if done via Windows Update, as it would contain
more info than my particular install might need. But, if I ever need to
reinstall from scratch, the file is waiting for me.
I ran the system readiness tool, before doing SP1. No problems
were indicated (and neither did the symptoms suggest it was
needed). I ran it, mainly to see what would happen :-) It is
supposed to check the "store", which is a folder containing
all versions of the OS and its associated files, linked to
other parts of the file system via hard links.
If I were to spend money on anything, it would be to get a
DVD from Microsoft, of Windows 7 SP1 as an OS installer disc.
The reason for that, is after you install SP1 via the above
file, your "repair install" options in the future are
strictly limited. For example, if you use the special
option in Disk Cleanup, after SP1 is installed, to remove
the SP1 backup files, there would then be no uninstall option
for SP1, no going backwards. So rather than Microsoft offering
a DVD with just the SP1 file on it, instead they should be
offering a real Windows 7 SP1 disc, so you can do a repair
install if you want.
http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials...r-install.html
Paul