Background
I was in the market for a new laptop when Wal-Mart announced their pre-Black Friday “super” special on an Acer 5315 laptop at a mere price of $350. I previously purchased a Compaq laptop back in 1999 that served me well, but by now was quite antiquated. The Acer 5315 specs looked promising except for one teensy weensy detail that I was sure I could overlook – Windows Vista.
Over the past several months I haven’t used the laptop as much as I thought I would, and I attribute much of that to the installation of Vista. Even after installing the maximum 2 gigs of memory, the machine was slow to boot up, slow to play Starcraft (although now I think I know why…), and slow to do almost anything. Even running a copy of Castblaster (a podcasting program) was painful. An experience trying to run a video editing program on it last week was the last straw, it was time to “upgrade” it to Windiows XP.
The Problem
In doing a Google search for installing Windows XP on the laptop, it became clear that this wasn’t going to be easy. It would seem that Acer had zero Windows XP drivers for the laptops, and the settings for booting up were confusing for those who were not familiar with installing Windows XP.
Now I had reinstalled Windows about a billion times over the years, but even for me the instructions seemed daunting. That is until I found a web site that offered step by step instructions for installing Windows XP on the Acer 5315. Here.
The Process
I followed the instructions carefully, but when I rebooted for the final time I was greeted with a wonderful blue screen of death. I then remembered something about the boot drive type that I read on a separate web site (which was not explained on the instructions I linked to above) that said I needed to change the type of the boot drive from SATA to IDE in the bios. Once I did that. Voila! Windows XP!
I went through the rest of the install, chose my initial username, and happily reinstalled Castblaster and the trial version of Goldwave… the important programs. I rebooted to make sure the installation really was successful and it auto-logged into my main account. I didn’t like that – I wanted the username/password screen, so I went into the control panel, changed the startup sequence to show the login screen and shut down the computer while I had lunch.
I Can’t Log In
A couple of hours later I decide I want to reinstall some more productivity software so I turn on the laptop, get to the login screen, type in my password and … I can’t log in. What the heck? I try the password over and over, which I set during installation, but nothing happens. Finally, I search on my other computer for ways to recover a lost password and give it a try. It doesn’t work and instead installs another copy of Windows on the computer. Not what I wanted.
Just as the computer is booting up after installing the second copy of the operating system, it hit me. I was stupid.
The Final Solution
What I did was so stupid, I hesitated to blog about it. When I set the startup sequence to ask for a username/password… I never actually set a password for the user account I was using. That is why I couldn’t log in. I then remembered what the password I did set was for – the Administrator user. So as soon as the Windows login screen appeared for installation #2, I rebooted and chose installation #1, logged in with the Administrator account, set the password for my main user account, logged off, logged back in with my user account and ta-da! Im back in business. And of course I promptly removed installation #2 from the boot menu, and deleted it from the computer.
Frustrating, yes. But after using it for half the weekend … oh so worth it.
[TAGS]Windows XP, Windows Vista, Acer 5315, Troy Rutter[/TAGS]