Moving data from XP to Vista should go well
Cox News Service
November 25, 2007
Q: I have a laptop computer with Windows XP and plan to buy a new desktop computer with Vista. I use the laptop when I travel and then transfer the files to my desktop when I am at home. Will I have any problems using files created or updated under XP and then transferred to the Vista machine, or vice versa?
P.D. Hughey
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A: No one can promise you a completely smooth ride with any operating system. However, I have computers running both Windows XP and Windows Vista at home. I have yet to have the first problem moving data and opening files, no matter which computer created them.
I use fairly standard programs at home, including Microsoft Office, Adobe Photoshop and the like. I suspect there are some less popular programs that may present problems, but even in questions from readers I haven't heard many squawks about moving files between Windows versions. The main complaint I hear is that some devices such as printers and scanners especially those that are more than two years old don't work properly or at all with Vista. In these cases, the manufacturer hasn't made the Vista driver a small software program that serves as an interface between the computer and the device available.
Q: My question concerns whether or not I was duped when I bought my new computer. The store offered for $130 to get all the quirks out of Vista for me so it would run perfectly when I got home. Does Vista still have so many "issues" that this was a good idea? I'm just curious.
Kara Bryant
A: I think it's a waste of money. Any real problems assuming the software already had been installed would come later when you had the computer at home and were installing your own programs and adding on devices such as printers. Even then, I wouldn't expect to see many problems.
If the problems stemmed from a lack of drivers for peripheral devices, as mentioned in the question above, the store couldn't solve that anyway.
Please send your questions to Bill Husted at bhusted@ajc.com. While he reads every e-mail, not all are answered. E-mails are selected for publication based on the likelihood that the answers will be of general interest.



