Yes you should be fine.im actually using vista home premium 64 bit.. it should be ok right?
It also depends on the board too for XP. On the last build here to see XP go on you had to use the press F6 for drivers option when first starting the installer to see the sata controller drivers copied from a floppy and loaded. The hard drive could then seen by the installer itself.
On the present board XP simply goes right on without fuss do to a newer updated chipset. Any drivers needed will either be on the software disk for the main board or at the board manufacturer's support site. For simply adding in a second storage drive the Disk Management tool in Windows or any 3 rd party partitioning tool will work for that.
im actually using vista home premium 64 bit.. it should be ok right?
It also depends on the board too for XP. On the last build here to see XP go on you had to use the press F6 for drivers option when first starting the installer to see the sata controller drivers copied from a floppy and loaded. The hard drive could then seen by the installer itself.
On the present board XP simply goes right on without fuss do to a newer updated chipset. Any drivers needed will either be on the software disk for the main board or at the board manufacturer's support site. For simply adding in a second storage drive the Disk Management tool in Windows or any 3 rd party partitioning tool will work for that. Vista already has it's own generic sata controller drivers included.
Cromewell, in a more readable format, mentioned this in post #2.
What?
He also pointed to another thread too!![]()
On many older boards when going to install XP you had to either make up a driver floppy and use the F6 option seen on the first install screen or wait for the second and use the press S for special devices option choosing the chipset seen in a list that was closest to the one on your board.
One thing to add here
was that when going to buy a drive retail back in the 90's you would see a floppy included along with an ide ribbon cable. The floppy would see drive tools provided by the manufacturer for maintainence and diagnostics mainly.
He also pointed to another thread too!
On many older boards when going to install XP you had to either make up a driver floppy and use the F6 option seen on the first install screen or wait for the second and use the press S for special devices option choosing the chipset seen in a list that was closest to the one on your board.
Vista solved all that fast by seeing a set of generic drivers included in it for easy installation.
Assuming your board didn't have native sata support anyway. But none of this matters since he's using Vista.Thats why untill XP SP1/2 came out you had to use the F6 to install Sata drivers for the newer boards that had Sata.