Illustrative Screen Captures
Operating System: Windows XP
Phase I – Text Phase
• Floppy Drive
• Unpartitioned and Unformatted Hard Drive
• CD ROM Drive
• Keyboard
• Mouse
• Network Interface Card
• SVGA Monitor
You should have a Windows XP Setup Boot Disk for this procedure.
The preferred method for initiating a clean install of Windows XP is by booting
from the XP CD. If the CD drive is not set as the primary boot device it will be
necessary to access and modify the BIOS settings. Once the CD drive is set to be
polled before the hard drive, insert the XP CD into the drive and power on the
system. If the screen shown in Figure appears, all is well and the clean install
of Windows XP Professional is underway.
Almost immediately after Windows setup begins the screen shown to the left will
appear. Unless you have the very latest in hardware you probably won’t need to
press the F6 key to install and SCSI or RAID driver. However, when XP is first
installed it tries to determine what type of BIOS is available on the computer.
Newer systems have what is known as Advanced Configuration and Power
Interface (ACPI) capability. Unfortunately, XP doesn’t always recognize a computer
BIOS is ACPI capable and doesn’t install the support for ACPI. Pressing F5 at this
point allows you to select the proper HAL.
Once the initialization process completes, the screen in Figure loads to guide
the XP installation process. More than anything, this screen is a fork in the
installation road. This guide deals with a clean install and to accomplish that goal
select the first option by pressing Enter. If you wanted to use the Recovery
Console with an already completed XP installation, pressing R would be the proper
choice. F3 ends the current installation process. After pressing Enter, setup will
search the drives for an existing XP installation.
Pretty much any way you go at an installation anymore you’re going to run into
the Windows XP Licensing Agreement, better known as the End-User License
Agreement or EULA, shown in Figure. Press F8 if you agree to the terms or
press Esc and start researching alternative operating systems if you don’t agree.
There’s no middle of the road.
Once Microsoft is convinced you’ve agreed to the EULA and qualify to install the
upgrade version, the screen in Figure appears where you choose a drive and
partition on which to install XP. For those familiar with prior Windows operating
systems, this section of setup is equivalent to FDISK when a clean install is
being performed. In this example, since there is only the one hard disk it will be
used to create the install partition by pressing C.
Once the partition creation has been initiated, the screen in Figure opens and
prompts for the size of the partition that will be created. As long as you adhere to
the minimum and maximum listed on the screen you have the freedom to set
partition sizes as you wish. Keep in mind that there are minimum space
requirements to install XP. Set the size of the desired partition and press Enter.
Once the partition has been created you are returned to the screen in Figure. If
there is still unallocated space on the drive and you want to create another
partition, highlight the unallocated space entry and press C again to repeat the
partition creation process. If you want to change the partition that was just
created, highlight it using the up and down arrow keys and press D. A
confirmation message will be displayed. Once you’re satisfied with the partition
scheme, highlight the desired install partition and press Enter.
The final step after creating and selecting the install partition is specifying the file
system to use for formatting the partition. The available choices will be shown on
the screen that appears as in Figure . In most cases you’ll want to use NTFS.
It’s far more secure than FAT32 and supports permissions, encryption, and
compression. The only reason for considering FAT32 would be data sharing with
W9x/Me installations and since this scenario deals with a clean install it’s not even
a consideration.
The XP CD is back in the drive and the partition is being formatted. This part of
the process is totally non-interactive and a tad less interesting than watching paint
dry – unless of course the paint is the same hideous yellow color as the progress
bar.
You thought the part where the partition was formatted was boring? More of the
same in this section of setup where the files needed for installation are being
copied to the hard drive. You’d think at the least they could have changed the
progress bar color.
Almost there; the configuration is being initialized. This screen has a blissfully
short appearance.
Finally. A red progress bar that indicates the system will reboot in 15 seconds so
the Graphical User Interface portion of setup can begin. If you’re still awake, tap
the Enter key to speed up that 15 seconds until restart. This is the end of the text
portion of setup.
This is it – Prepare yourself for what is possibly the longest commercial for a piece
of software that has ever been presented, also called the Graphical User Interface
phase of XP setup.
Phase II – Graphical User Interface Phase
The majority of this setup phase requires no user intervention. The screens contain a description of
Windows XP features. I can only assume they were created in an attempt to kill the time while XP
installs and provide a general time to completion reference. I’ve placed a red border around those
screens that require user input.
The first screen that requires any user input in this phase is Regional and Language Options. If you’re using English and you do entry via the keyboard the defaults will suit.you fine. Somehow, typing my name and my company name doesn’t exactly give me a warm fuzzy sense of personalization, but that’s what the Personalize Your Software screen shown in Figure — wants you to enter.
The screen everybody loves to hate; the dreaded Your Product Key screen. The XP installation process stops here if you don’t have one, so for those of you leaving at this point, have a good day. What’s Your
Computer’s Name? sounds so childish, but nonetheless you still need to provide a name.Unless you prefer to live in the past or future, Date and Time Settings should be set current. In Network Settings, unless you have a good reason for selecting Custom Settings, go with the Typical Settings. No matter how special you might think your setup is,in most cases it will function perfectly well with the typical settings.




























