I did this. Not a big deal. I wound up with OEM XP (Dell version at that)
and Vista Business in place of Vista Home Premium that came on my Dell
Inspiron 1501. The Dell disks that came with my laptop were (1) Vista
install DVD (2) MS Works install CD (3) Dell driver DVD and (4) Roxio
crippleware CD. Your Dell will also have a System Restore partition that is
capable of restoring the computer to factory new condition, with all the
crapola in place. The Office 2007 that comes with your computer is no doubt
the crippleware version too, and people have had trouble either using it or
deleting it, from the articles in this group. McAfee is an acceptable
security solution, but the one on your laptop is no doubt crippleware too.
It will go dead after a month or so unless you feed it money.
You can install Vista either from your own Vista Home Premium DVD or from
the one that came with the laptop. There should be no difference, unless
the newer one is SP1. Then you can install all the drivers you need either
from the driver DVD or to get the latest and greatest download them from
http://support.dell.com. It sounds as if you are not interested in
restoring your computer to factory new condition. You could therefore
delete all partitions from the destination hard disk and impose a partition
scheme that you like. I did this, but I copied the system restore partition
to a Ghost image file first, not that I will ever use it.
I would advise you to at least play with the laptop as is for a few days, to
get the feel of Vista. It is different from XP.
Good luck,
Earle
"James Ivey" <nope@nowhere.com> wrote in message
news:ejHJZp9BJHA.3484@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
> Hi Everyone,
>
> I've got a brand new Dell Studio 17 laptop that was bought for me. It has
> Vista Home Premium, Office 2007, and a whole bunch of crapola I don't care
> about - including McAfee (sp?)
>
> Makes me nuts to have all this extra *stuff* on a computer, so I'm
> considering wiping the harddrive and doing a clean install of Vista.
>
> In addition to what came with the laptop, I've got an OEM version of Vista
> Home Premium I bought not long after it was released - seems like it was
> oh, a year, maybe a year and a half ago. This is what I'm thinking of
> installing.
>
> I used to format/reload regularly back in the Win95-WinXP days, but its
> been a while since I did one so I'm a bit rusty.
>
> Any suggestions? Any major hurdles?
>
> Of course I've got about 10 Dell cds that came with the laptop - drivers
> and such.
>
> Dumb idea?
>
> James
>
>