I assume if you are currently running Win 10 (1607) that was updated from a Win 7 key and activated, that the Creators edition will still activate on a clean install without a key at all?
That was how I did it last time. Haven't tried on the newest ISO.Also if someone is testing it, try to install without the key first and then once in windows is all installed, then try to activate the key and see if that makes any difference.
That was how I did it last time. Haven't tried on the newest ISO.
I apologise if this has been covered, but I just saw a tweet from Paul Thurrott that he did a clean install of the Creator's update and was able to activate it with an unused Windows 7 key. So apparently that mechanism is still in place.
-KeithP
So it looks like its still doable, but for how long is anyones guess
Yeah. It's about other aspects of their costs -- in support for Win7 and Win 8, and maintenance for Win 10. You could ask "What would happen if Win7-to-Win10 upgraders were asked to pay for a new build at some future time? Imagine what THOSE costs might be. That's why they don't go there. So they'll honor their commitment to the original Free Win 10 under Win 7 product key, and they should honor it for Anniversary through Creators Update and updates beyond that.MS wants people to run Win10, therefore it's logical that old keys will still activate.
Their server was probably overloaded like with what happened when 10 was originally released leading to activation issues.For the record: I tested this today with the Fall Creators Update ISO, clean installed and activated with a new Win7 key, and it still works (still not sure what I did wrong back when I started this thread). I notice that the Assistive Technologies upgrade site is remains online too.