Your gadget won't be set to boot on your optical stress interior the BIOS. the thank you to get admission to the BIOS and the particular steps to alter this placing will count on the producer of your pc / motherboard. in case you have documentation for it you may seek for suggestion on getting access to and enhancing the BIOS, or you may pass to the manufacturers information superhighway website and get carry of documentation, notwithstanding if, enhancing some settings on your BIOS would reason destructive effects. normally there will be a "Boot"determination interior the BIOS which will enable to set the boot units and order. I must be an undemanding count of with the intention that your optical stress is blanketed, and blanketed before your difficult stress.
Chris R
2009-07-15 21:11:57 UTC
Nero came out with an update for Nero 7, to be compatible with Vista (I don't know about Windows 7):
But to make sure, go to nero 7 > help > about and check and see if its premium
if not, it MIGHT not work =/
Daryl S
2009-07-15 11:58:29 UTC
+My question to you is: Why in the world would you take a brand new computer and install a Release Candidate version of an operating system on it? The REAL Windows 7 is due out in just 3 months; why not wait? A RC version is just a testing version. That being the case, it would not surprise me if Nero 7 did not work. If you go to the Nero site, I don't even know if they are Windows 7 ready with that version of their product or have patches for it. You'll have to see, but I hope you reconsider messing up a perfectly good computer. I think maybe you haven't even considered that perhaps there are NO WINDOWS 7 DRIVERS for this new computer? So possibly, most of your hardware (except for basic functions) won't even work?
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