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  1. Hi all,
    So I've been out of the game for a while and would like some info regarding Win OS?

    Having edited on ol Mag G5 and they were fun back then, I decided to retire an old win 7 tower I build, too many fans.
    I found a Dell MT 9010 that I can upgrade the hardware, It's got win 10 pro and I love win 7 pro( but it's old).
    Should I stick with the 10 and grind thru all the update headaches and such or re format it to win 7 and use exclusively
    for Video, Audio and Photo editing and rendering?
    Any info will be appreciated
    Thanks.
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  2. Member
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Location
    Peterborough, England
    Search Comp PM
    I use a stand alone computer for video work that runs Windows XP and I see no reason to change. I upgraded it to the best spec I could with the hardware it has and it just works. All the software I use runs perfectly and, to be perfectly honest, I much prefer XP or Windows 7 to the Windows 10 on the laptop I'm using to type this. I could, if I really had to, build myself a much higher spec machine for video work but then I would almost certainly find the software I've been using for years wouldn't run on a later OS so I'd then need to change software and start another learning curve on using it. My suggestion would be to stick with what you have and what you know rather than starting again almost from scratch.
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  3. Member Cornucopia's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2001
    Location
    Deep in the Heart of Texas
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    You could always put on both (Win10, Win7), and dual boot, deciding which worked better. Other than available space, and (some) added boot complexity, it doesn't hurt. Either way, I would suggest clean OS installs not upgrades.
    9010s should work fine w/ Win7, since that was the era they were produced, even though 10 should be fine also.

    Scott
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  4. Originally Posted by Richard_G View Post
    I use a stand alone computer for video work that runs Windows XP and I see no reason to change. I upgraded it to the best spec I could with the hardware it has and it just works. All the software I use runs perfectly and, to be perfectly honest, I much prefer XP or Windows 7 to the Windows 10 on the laptop I'm using to type this. I could, if I really had to, build myself a much higher spec machine for video work but then I would almost certainly find the software I've been using for years wouldn't run on a later OS so I'd then need to change software and start another learning curve on using it. My suggestion would be to stick with what you have and what you know rather than starting again almost from scratch.
    Thanks for the reply,
    Yes I love the old legacy OS's They just work with out all the acrobatics.
    I may find a way to use both, but I think I'll be stuck with just one?
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  5. Originally Posted by Cornucopia View Post
    You could always put on both (Win10, Win7), and dual boot, deciding which worked better. Other than available space, and (some) added boot complexity, it doesn't hurt. Either way, I would suggest clean OS installs not upgrades.
    9010s should work fine w/ Win7, since that was the era they were produced, even though 10 should be fine also.

    Scott
    Thanks for the reply,
    I could try that but I think with the upgrade I'm just limited to 1 or the other.
    I agree clean install is the way to go, I think I'll try 10 for while and see.
    Thanks.
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  6. Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
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    United States
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    Originally Posted by QvidZ View Post
    Originally Posted by Cornucopia View Post
    You could always put on both (Win10, Win7), and dual boot, deciding which worked better. Other than available space, and (some) added boot complexity, it doesn't hurt. Either way, I would suggest clean OS installs not upgrades.
    9010s should work fine w/ Win7, since that was the era they were produced, even though 10 should be fine also.

    Scott
    Thanks for the reply,
    I could try that but I think with the upgrade I'm just limited to 1 or the other.
    I agree clean install is the way to go, I think I'll try 10 for while and see.
    Thanks.
    I think so, clean is recommended, although I've been lucky with in-place upgrades in the past.

    My current PC is Windows 8.1 > 10 with in-place upgrade (no problems to speak of),
    and an older PC with two installs of XP -
    one was a fresh install, the other Windows Millenium > XP with in-place upgrade.
    I never saw any difference between the two regarding problems or issues
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