mmkhan
QUOTE
The computer magazine c't describes in the current expenditure, how the Home edition transforms by a small manipulation into a Windows XP Professional. Such a conversion can be very meaningful for many, because Windows XP Home edition does without some important safety functions.

It is probably not necessary to make a ' drilling out ' over a nachruestung with functions from the Professional version. It goes many more simply, because Microsoft provides on the installation CD already a nearly adequate XP Professional. The change of two bytes in an installation file with the help of the Registry editor produces a version, which installs itself afterwards as XP Professional.

The advantages of an armament of the operating system are particularly in the safety area. Only with the professional version one can work without Admin rights, which prevents the most viruses and Trojaner to unfold on the system. "it remains unexplainable, why Microsoft did just with the Home version without such safety functions", so c't expert Axel Vahldiek.

With XP Professional can be configured also user accounts and groups by far more simply. Also that access of the job PC to the domestic system by remote Desktop folds loud c't with the rigged system. To an adequate Windows XP professional are missing however some few functions. "is worth however alone because of the better virus and Trojanerschutzes", thus Vahldiek transferred.


Source: h**p://www.silicon.de/cpo/news-itservices/detail.php?nr=21383
Note: Use translatator (i used babelfish.altavista.com) from german to english

h**p://www.gizmodo.com/gadgets/software/howto-change-windows-xp-home-to-windows-xp-pro-105486.php
belgther
But there are other things that XP Pro has, and XP home doesn't... IIS, for example, or some net tools like getmac.exe, some defined registry settings which are not in XP home, and much more... I am not a defender of Microsoft at all, but I don't think Microsoft has just done it so easy with modifying 2 bytes.
Killaloop
well something like IIS is a software, a home user does not need and should not be included in a home edition.
but adapting user rights and setting security permissions is something a homeuser nowaday needs. I dont need to explain the reasons here, since everyone on this board knows enough about the problems running everything with administrator rights.
btw. "nachruestung" is equal to upgrading
whi7er
i knew it! microsoft is too lazy, and the two operating systems are too similar to not be just a rename with a few different files - only i couldn't figure out what files made xp pro itself.
mmkhan
QUOTE
btw. "nachruestung" is equal to upgrading


Thanks Killaloop, i used babelfish and it was also confused for that. smile.gif
dw-chow
accidental double, ignore.
dw-chow
well this may be a little off, but there really isn't much difference at all... nothing more than a quick couple changes of the registry..... if you try to change it yourself, windows will pop up and say no no. but there's a program out there called ntswitch which you can google, it's kind of very dangerous. i'd only use it if you're a 2k user looking for a free server. but if you've got loads of time and isolated computers on your hands... you can play with it on several os installs. XP "server" had a funky name, and converting win2003 server went back to XP as a consumer "version" .. . crazy isn't it.

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