I ended up purchasing the upgrade version of Vista Home Premium. After thinking about it, I am installing it on my laptop. After having to uninstall a bunch of stuff and deleting stuff from My Documents so that I would have 10Gb free space, I finally got the upgrade started. Of course it warned me that a bunch of programs probably wouldn’t work when the upgrade was finished (including Visual Studio 2005 and Virtual PC 2004!). And then it started chugging away, while warning me that it will reboot multiple times and would take hours!
I am installing this on my laptop because there aren’t any files on there that I don’t have backed up. It will also take less time to blow away than my desktop computer would.
<edit> I am just editing this post for completeness sake. I ran into a few problems with the install (really, with post-install) on my HP laptop. HP does not support Vista on my laptop. But then after trying to find Vista drivers for my HP printers, it doesn’t look like HP supports Vista at all! On Vista, my touchpad was just listed as a mouse. So I spent a couple hours trying to find a driver for it. One thing that has always bugged me about touchpads is the tap-click feature is always enabled by default. When I type, I tend to rest part of my hand on the touchpad. Next thing I know, I accidentally tap the touchpad and I am typing somewhere else on the screen. So getting the driver for the touchpad to disable tap-clicks was essential. I ended up downloading the Alps touchpad driver from Dell.
The video chipset is an ATI Radeon Mobile 9000igp. And of course ATI doesn’t have a Vista driver for that (too old?). I found a driver from Toshiba through one of those driver download sites (sorry, can’t remember which one). The driver is for XP. But at least it lets me set the screen resolution higher.
My laptop still has a Win Experience score of 1.0, mainly due to the video card. That is even with having the video card get a full 128mb of memory (the most that the bios will let me give it). When I bought the laptop, it had 512mb of RAM for the whole system, and only 16mb reserved for video RAM. The 512mb was divided into 2 sticks, only one of which is easily replaceable. Previously I had removed the easily accessable 256mb stick and replaced it with a 1gb stick. With 128mb reserved for video, that gives me 1.25gb of system ram.
Now if only the video card was replaceable!