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Dual Boot Your Pre-Installed Windows 7 Computer with XP

If You Want to Dual Boot Your Windows 7 and XP at the same time

 then These post can Help you For that!!



Following are the Steps

1)
Create a New Partition
The first thing we need to do is create a new partition on the Windows 7 machine. Luckily we can do it without any 3rd party software. To begin, click on Start and type either partition or disk management into the search box and at the top of the menu click on Create and format hard disk partitions.

The Disk Management window opens, and from here we need to free up space on the (C:) drive Windows 7 is installed on. Right-click on the drive and select Shrink Volume.




A window pops up showing the drive is being queried for available space.

Now enter the amount of space you want to shrink the volume. You’re shown the total size of the disk and the amount of size that is available to shrink. In this example we’re freeing up 40GB of space.



After the process completes you’ll see the new Unallocated space. Right-click that and select New Simple Volume.




The New Simple Volume Wizard launches which is a straight forward process. When you get to the Format Partition section, NTFS is selected by default as the file system and you can leave that as is. You might want to rename the Volume label something else like “XP Partition” so it’s easier to identify when installing XP. Also you’ll probably want to make sure to check Perform a Quick Format. 



After the format is complete you will see the new volume as a healthy partition listed.


Now when you go into My Computer you’ll see the the new disk and notice that space has been taken away from the (C:) drive Windows 7 is installed on.


Install XP on the New Partition

Now that you know how to create a new partition on your Windows 7 machine, it’s time to install XP on it. Here we’re installing XP Professional on the new partition. Boot from the XP installation disk and start the install process.

When it comes to choosing a partition, make sure you select the one you created using the steps above. In this example we made a 10GB partition for the XP install.


If the partition you created was already formatted as NTFS you can leave it, or you can choose the FAT file system if you want.

Basically you continue through as if you were doing a clean install on any hard drive.



Create Boot Loader
Once installation of XP is successful you can now go through and install the latest Microsoft Updates and drivers. You will undoubtedly notice that the machine is booting directly into XP at this time. This is due to XP writing it’s bootloader over Windows 7’s. To get both XP and Windows 7 as an option at the boot screen you can use the free utility EasyBCD 1.72 or their new 2.0 Beta.



 


 
After getting the boot loader back you should see both XP and Windows 7 as options in the Windows Boot Manager.

GOOD LUCK

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