Autocad 2000 Unter Windows 8 Installieren
AutoCAD LT 2000 on Win7/8 64bit Install AutoCAD LT 2000 on 64bit Windows 7 and 8I had a hard time installing AutoCAD LT 2000 on 64bit Windows 7 computerat work due to computer upgrade. It won't install out of the box.The root problem in installing is that AutoCAD 2000 has an ancient 16bitinstaller that won't run on 64bit Windows. AutoCAD itself is 32bit andworks once installed.I did some research and found that I'm not the only one with theproblem.
One common suggestion to get AutoCAD working is installing avirtual machine called from Microsoft. Itwould havebeen too slow and clumsy to use.Another possible solution is commercial.
Windows 8 Upgrade
I onlyhappened to find that one after I got my AutoCAD running.SolutionAll thanks to my solution belongs to on Autodesk forums. What I did was make install script thatbasically does automatically the steps on that guide.
Then I made a newmodified installation CD for future use. I won't share you the whole CD,but the files and easy guide needed to make one yourself with your ownCD.The installation. Copy contents of the installation CD to your hard drive. and extract the contents in the directorycontaining AutoCAD CD contents. When extracting, overwrite the existingfiles.
Now burn that directory to a CD and you have a new install CD touse (oryou can install AutoCAD straight from the hard drive). Start the installation by running WIN7-INSTALL.bat (or WIN7-INSTALL-FI.bat for finnish installinstructions) andfollow the instructions on the command prompt that opens up. The just made installation CD has Default programs editor inWIN7-DefaultProgramsEditor directory.
Use that to give.DWG and.DXF files fancy icons. Have fun using AutoCAD! Remember: Do not expectit to work seamlessly on all conditions. It is a really old program on a newoperating system and has it's glitches. In my case the ups were biggerthan the downs.©oku 15.3.2015.
Information to help you load and run AutoCAD 2000 on your Windows 7 (64bit) system.I had to upgrade from Windows 7 Home edition to Windows & professional ($90.00)Then I downloded Windows virtual PC and Windows XP Mode (free download). The Windows XP Mode runs in the background (in its own window). I loaded AutoCAD 2000 Architectural Desktop from my software CD.
As I was doing this I had to go to the program compatibility (start-programs-accessories-program compatibility - pick 'from C D drive') I changed the compatibility to windows 98/ me.I was glad to have found this so I don't have to spend $1000 to $5000 to upgrade AitoCAD.Also I have a driver that lets me run my HP 750c+ plotter on Windows 7 - 64bit if you need that.Good Luck.Jeff. A solution.install either VMware (free version) not their full Workstaion or the Sun Java Virtual Box and create a virtual Hard disk/Operating System with your old OS and load your copy of AutoCAD 2000 into the virtual environment. When set up correctly you can access all the files on your HD from the virtual OS.Only issues are that you have enough PC memory and you set the virtual HD/PC settings to run big software. You may need.2Gb of memory minimum so you can have Windows 7 running and the Virtual OS (Win95,98,Me,2000 or XP) with AutoCAD running within it. checked an old AutoCAD 2000 trial CD and it says 64Mb RAM needed so should be OK with 1Gb of RAM. I recently got a new laptop with Windows 7 Home Premium, 64 bit installed on it, and finally got around to trying to install AutoCAD 2000 on it.
Thank you very much for your reply. Here is what I have found out after several sessions with both Microsoft and Hewlett Packard. I am running Windows 7 Premium on my HP computer. Per Microsoft sessions, Windows Home Premium will not run Auto Cad 2000 without complications ( as you mentioned, some things work, some don't ) but by upgrading to Windows Professional, your problems are solved. Providing your computer is up to it. Now per HP sessions, the computer I bought is not set up for office applications.
By this I mean anything other than home use such as checking email, internet browsing, playing cards, etc. Apparently Auto Cad 2000 is considered as office software, not home software therefore it still will not run on my computer. This is 100% my fault for not doing the proper research. Now, here is the good news. According to Microsoft, you can download software called virtual PC ( by the way this is free). Then download free software called XP Mode. Now this will allow you to run XP on your Windows 7 operating system.
But this will only operate with Windows 7 Professional or Windows 7 Ultimate, not Windows 7 Home Premium. The upgrade to the Professional edition it $89.95 from Microsoft.
There is a video demonstration on Microsofts web site that will explain how this works and how to install it. All of this information is the result of several sessions with both Microsoft and Hewlett Packard. The representative from HP ( an American by the way) told me it was not worth the headaches I will encounter without upgrading my computer and Windows 7 Professional. I apologize for taking up so much room and time, but I tried to relay all of the information I have gathered to try to relieve some of the problems for someone else. I installed ACADLT 2000 on a Win7 Professional 32 bit box.It seems to be working so far except printing. I had a HPLJ HL-1320 attached to an XP SP3 (professional) box. Acad couldn't see the printer or any of my other networked printers (Win7 drivers aren't installed on the print server (W2003 Server) yet.I tried attaching the HL-1320 to the Win7 box, and ACAD would see the printer, but would give a memory error when I tried to select it.
Windows 10
Autocad 2000 Unter Windows 8 Installieren Pc
It would then disappear from the selection till I restarted ACAD.Just FYI for now.Cliff.