Running Windows Vista on Intel 13th Gen hardware. USB3 problems? Let's install it directly from HDD!
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 พ.ย. 2023
- This is Windows Vista running on Intel 13th gen hardware. It simply works...!
In the first part of the video, I installed Vista 32 bit using an optical drive and PS/2 mouse and keyboard and there were absolutely no problems at all. It was a clean install from start to finish with nothing to report.
Next, I made a another fresh install using the Vista Ultimate 64 bit. This time the installation was started directly from hard drive with no USB involved but still with PS/2 support. This method is described in detail. Enjoy... - วิทยาศาสตร์และเทคโนโลยี
this is the first "one-day old" video that youtube recommended to me that seems actually worth watching
Yeah
lol
@KSGD1111 well duh, i wrote this comment when the video was 1 day old
This was the first OS on a computer I could call my own! I love Vista so much because it holds so many memories for me
Yep, it was my first OS on a laptop. A little bit slow on my configuration but back then I was into running the latest Windows in day 1 if possible.
mine was XP on Pentium 3
but man, i envy vista back then and still to this day
been used 7 for a bit but it still inferior to Vista interface
I did build 8800 GTX on Core Quad extreme system, kept using Vista on it till Windows 10.
Windows Vista is so beautiful even for today's standards. Shame Microsoft went to another direction.
This dude has literally the craziest partition map
Well, that's what you get when you can run all Windows editions on the same PC using the same hardware.
Great video! This OS looks amazing!
Thanks a lot!
I miss Windows Vista 😭
The title should have been "Gru explaining in detail how to install Windows Vista on the latest hardware"
g o r l s
Very good and it worked for me with the original install disc with a pcie ps2 card adapter on my ASRock Z790 PG Sonic Motherboard with Socket LGA 1770 and I also put the unofficial drivers and patches on a blank disc since I have 5.25 Drive connected to one of the SATA ports!!!
Did you have to install drivers for the PCI-E PS2 adapter?
@@adriano90210 No I did not have to.
@@classicmgammer I looked into these adapters and appears that they are in fact PCI to USB chips. In theory should work only with OSes with USB support, did you try it in DOS?
I'm very happy
My first OS in Windows Version was the Window 98
When be your next video?
Eagerly waiting for it brother.
I just watched your channel It's just fantastic.
And I can't wait to watch more videos,
So when are you going to upload a new video?
I'm waiting eagerly.
See you soon.
Hopefully this week, maybe Sunday... It will be a `two chapter video` about Windows 2000, the last NT operating system compatible with 486 CPUs. First, a quick tour of Windows 2000 running on a 486 DX4/100 and then... Win 2K on an Intel 13th Gen CPU...
@@O_mores That's Great!
Same procedure for Ryzen cpu?
Regarding AMD, you better use AM3/AM3+/FM2 and avoid AM4 onwards since AM4 onwards have poor legacy BIOS support
That's not entirely true, I use a Ryzen 9 3900X and I can run every Windows in legacy mode on an AM4 X470 motherboard with 2 classic PCI slots. Literally every Windows, including 3.11 with LAN, sound and video drivers: th-cam.com/video/LEbnzPDdF0E/w-d-xo.html Also NT 3.51, NT 4, 98 etc. But... Intel is much better when it comes to DOS. If you run a DOS window in Windows 3.11 or Windows 98 on a Ryzen CPU.. everything it's slow...It has to do with V86-mode implementation, where Intel is simply much better.
The other day I was messing with an old (26 years) PCI USB1 (opti 82c861) card on an 1151 and noticed that the UEFI BIOS picked up the mouse I had connected to test. Also surprise that it worked in windows 10. Makes me wonder if your USB2 card is bootable from the BIOS.
I have the same card - I want to use it in a 486 configuration. And... yes, the PCI-E card to USB 2.0 using VIA 6212 chip works with every Windows OS with USB support, it's recognized as USB 1.1 even Windows 95 after installing USB supplement. Back to Vista, mouse and keyboard are detected during setup using this card.
I'm really happy. because the next video is about Windows 2000 right?
I guess Windows 2000 is next...
Thank you
If I want to run Windows Vista without virtual machine, I would install this system on a virtual machine first. Then I will boot physical computer from virtual hard drive.
Please reply.
I can't wait to watch more videos. Please post new video soon
loving watching these kind of videos, trying to install vista on my 12th gen i7 laptop, and i can never get past that darn windows logo screen, always freezes in place, dunno how to fix that haha
I'm glad you like this type of videos. Now... what is your approach with Vista? Are you installing via using USB stick?
@@O_mores actually yes, using a iso with extended kernals brings me to a complete logo, without it it freezes midway through, and im gonna try to install from the ssd on this machine later today
Did you make it?
@@O_mores no i found the iso online, i dont really know how to make an iso with the extended herbal, and i ultimately decided on linux mint for the os
@@MinecraftRules141 You don't really need the extended kernel. I didn't use it in the video. It was a clean Vista installation using an original Vista ISO. You just have to do the hard drive trick explained in the last part of the video.
Wow 👍👍👍
for usb 3.x drivers i use FlashBoot Pro commercial edition to have the UEFI Patch, but no NVMe drivers works with Vista
bootsect gives "This tool can only be run on systems booted using a PC/AT BIOS. This system
was booted using EFI or some other firmware type." error. any idea to fix?
It looks like you are using UEFI and you should use instead CSM to boot. Just enable CSM. On what configuration are you trying to install Vista?
@@O_mores i enabled csm. did not change anything :( my system uses ryzen 5700x and b350 mobo with csm open
@@O_mores just found the solution! 32 bit vista bootsect 😂
Hmm, what bootsect tool and version are you using? The one from the original Vista .ISO? Also it might help to use clean command or your boot drive. (it will delete everything - like a factory reset) Type: diskpart - select disk X - clean
You just blew my mind at 0:26. Windows NT 6, 6=VI. VIsta. Wonder if that was intentional.
I don't know... NT 4 was released in 1996, Windows 2000 was supposed to be NT5 - and this is how it was presented in beta releases. But Windows XP was internally named NT 5.2 and not NT6... - maybe because it was released only one year later after Windows 2K.
chad video
XHCI hand-off didn't help because all Intel chipsets since Skylake don't contain EHCI USB controllers, only XHCI which isn't supported in Vista.
Sheldon ❤
We need a newer compatible browser for vista to run youtube
Google Chrome 49 : am i a joke to you ?
How are you able to avoid any ACPI issues when installing Vista? Attempting this on a Gigabyte Z690 board
In Windows 2000 and XP you have to press F7 (at the moment you are asked to press F6 for additional disk drivers) and Windows won't use ACPI. Vista is another story, since it was launched in 2007 when ACPI was a well established protocol so it expects that your "Windows Vista Certified" computer it is ACPI compatible. Are you installing in legacy mode? I didn't have any ACPI issues - just a bunch on unrecognized ACPI devices in control panel.
There are vista iso that come with USB 3 drivers included
Please post your new video waiting for long time.😢
After XP, I stopped using winders for anything. Nothing is good about it anymore. Its easier at this point to just install Linux and you dont have to worry about driver issues as much. Plus! It doesnt spy on you.
Every OS released from 2015 onwards is terrible. Includes Windows, Linux, MacOS, VIRTUALLY EVERYTHING!
@@PurblePink8678 I kind of agree. Its insane what IBM is doing with redhat. MacOS staled out.
@@djksfhakhaks It's not just RedHat or Ubuntu turning terrible, it's the ENTIRETY of Linux! And also MacOS is frequently making older Mac computers obsolete and out of support.
@@PurblePink8678 never been a Debian base fan. The lack if testing in that tree is sick. There's a reason that no corporations use it. When you can do an update and completely Bork the whole install, you should be rethinking things. Winders has the same issue, macos on occasion also. Apple as a whole is pretty evil for things you've pointed out and also the complete failure in right to repair.
@@PurblePink8678 no no. I'm not disagreeing with you. Can we do a ctrl-v on systemd already? Also, let's put the other Steve in charge of apple.
9:41 lol
Didn't know that you can install Vista directly from SSD. Last time I've installed Vista from USB the installation started but it gave an error when the files were copied. `Expanding files` remained stuck at 1%. So I used a SATA DVD from an old laptop for the installation but for that it was necessary to make a DIY power connector. I feel kinda stupid now... :)))) 😵💫😵💫😵💫
Of course you can, the same procedure (mostly) can be used with Windows 7. Without USB support and optical drive installing from HDD it's not even optional... :)
Seems like a lot of hoops to jump through just to get Vista to start an install from the HDD.
As for me, I'd just update the Vista boot.wim to integrate the USB 3.0 drivers, or otherwise just get a USB 2.0 PCIe card.
you forgot Windows Me
Chronologically, it was a Windows ME video and then came this Vista video. I guess it was the first video where Windows Millennium is running on such new hardware because the patch that made this possible (cregfix) was like 2 weeks old. Here is the Windows ME in action: th-cam.com/video/Qn44lD0nQng/w-d-xo.html
there any possible to install vista on nvme drive?
Yes, if it works with XP it should work with Vista too. I didn't try. With Windows XP it's very easy actually, the drive is recognized during the setup and you don't have to do any special move - just to use the right ISO installation in the first place. You can check this video: th-cam.com/video/pE3CswJweqs/w-d-xo.html
New video please
9:41 SHIT+F10.. I feel bad for laughing at that typo, but then again, it may as well be the shit key rather than shift, since if you're using that combo instead of holding CTRL, you're probably saying "Oh shit! I forgot to hold CTRL!"
Edit: The intermission music used while Vista was installing (as well as in the video's outro) is actually this:
th-cam.com/video/CWbntjo5UOE/w-d-xo.html
Though the video actually seems to use a Sega Genesis/Mega Drive cover I can't find...
OH SHIFT!!...! I think I'll have to add some post processing censorship to this video... ;)
@@O_mores And maybe in the future link to the awesome tunes you use too :-)
Next video when and what?
This week: Windows NT 3.1 and Windows 2000. Two separate videos, I don't in what order...
5:44 What the FUCK is that selection menu?
Well, you can select how your USB drive will be emulated.
i still use windows vista like a secondary os on my junk pc and runs better than 7
why not use the front usb 2.0 header on the motherbored with a adapter hell you might beable to use windows 95 with the right drivers
If the USB 2.0 ports on the back are not working (and it seems they don't) won't make any difference using an USB header from the motherboard since they using the same chip.
oh nvm then@@max_MXX
Windows Vista is extremely light for modern standards... This OS however is extremely outdated. It's version of DirectX is DirectX 9. Heck I forgot how old this thing is... It didn't even support USB 3.0 or M.2 heck this thing is totally outdated. It doesn't work with anything current.
Vista supports up to DirectX 11... DirectX 9.0C is supported in Windows 98.
@@max_MXX Windows 98 is kind of expected because of the extended support it got. But Windows Vista is a very odd system because back then it felt super modern and advanced and it was a system that very little people used. Right now it is way more outdated than I thought it would be. It doesn't even support USB 3. Even though in terms of looks it looks about as modern as Windows 7.
@@nugget6635
Native USB3 support was introduced with Windows 8. Windows 7, Vista and XP need special drivers to make it work.
if backward compatibility of windows vista and windows 7 bothers you then all windows systems with NT kernel bothers you if windows systems with NT kernel bothers you then stick in your back leftists