One of the big barriers
to upgrading to Windows 8 is that Windows 7 is so good. For
keyboard-and-mouse users, Windows 8 isn’t a hugely compelling upgrade — and
without judicious use of third-party apps to bring
back the Start menu and other core Windows 7
features, Windows 8 can actually make the desktop experience
worse.
But what if you want to try out Windows 8? What if you want to take the Metro
Start screen for a spin? (Who knows, maybe you’ll like it.) What if you want to
give Windows 8 a chance?
One method you could use is virtualization, where you quite literally have
Windows 8 open in a window on your Windows 7 PC. Virtualization isn’t really
viable if you’re looking to truly experience Windows 8 and everything that it
entails, though. For that, you need to dual-boot.
How to dual-boot/multi-boot Windows 8 with Windows 7
This guide assumes that you already have Windows 7 (or XP or Vista)
installed. If you’ve already got Windows 8 installed, and you want to install
Windows 7 as an additional OS, this guide might still work — but no
guarantees.
First things first, you
should backup any important documents. You shouldn’t lose any files during this
process, but it’s better to be safe than sorry.
With that out of the way, hit Start, type
diskmgmt.msc, and press
Enter. This will open the Disk Management console. You should see a big (or
small) list of all the drives currently attached to your computer.
Find the drive that Windows 7 is installed on (it should be marked as “Boot”
or “System”), right click it, and click Shrink Volume. In the window that pops
up, you ideally need a figure that’s around 50,000MB (50GB). If your hard drive
is very full, this might not be possible. In theory the minimum install size for
Windows 8 is around 20GB, but I really wouldn’t proceed without at least
30-50GB. If Disk Management refuses to shrink your volumes, you may need to try
a third-party tool such as Paragon’s Hard Disk Manager.
Once the volume has been shrunk, a black, “Unallocated” region will appear at
the end of the drive. Right click this and select New Simple Volume. Click
through the dialog windows and give the new volume a memorable name such as
Windows 8. Don’t change any other settings. This process will
format the new partition, which may take a little while.Installing Windows 8
When given the option, select a Custom install (not Upgrade). On the next screen
you’ll be shown a bunch of partitions/volumes. Select the one that’s labeled
Windows 8 (or whatever you called it). Be absolutely certain that
you’ve selected the right volume, then click Next.
The slick Windows 8
installer will now do its thing. It will reboot once or twice, but eventually
you’ll be greeted with a multi-boot menu that allows you to select which OS you
want to load (Windows 8, Windows 7, or any other OSes that’re installed).
Windows 8 will load by default after a few seconds, but you can change it back
to Windows 7 by clicking “Change defaults or choose other options” at the bottom
of the screen. Voilà: You now have a PC that dual-boots Windows 8 and Windows 7.




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