FrankRamiro
Senior member
i did upgrade My Hp's but my lenovo did not yet get win 10 update
I just installed Win10 RTM a few weeks ago. I'd rather not do a clean install.
Would this work:
1) Image current Win10 RTM setup
2) Install clean Win8.1 and activate
3) Run Win10 upgrade inside Win8.1 to generate hardware hash/key
4) Restore Win10 RTM image
5) Reactivate Win10
Would the system recognize the hardware hash after the restore?
For those that are using the Windows 10 Media Creation Tool from MS - they have 32-bit, 64-bit, and "both". How does the "both" option work? I presume it's a single ISO, that installs to either 32-bit or 64-bit capable systems. Is it somehow auto-detect (prefer x64 if available), or does it prompt you to choose one during the installation phase? How does it work for an upgrade, overtop, on an existing system? Does it still let you choose? Or auto-select (same as current OS)?
So after I upgrade from 7 for free, will I have a key that I can use for future installations? I'd prefer to use clean installs in the future.
I downloaded the media creation tool and picked create Windows 10 Pro 64-bit on USB, it just says Something Happened and then nothing...same thing to ISO file.
Any ideas what to do?
I tried it and did not work this way.
Because of the current load there are features that refuse to work for many people while they are working for others.
Many issues are Not as yet clarified by MS, so it is Hard to know where we stand on them.
😎
Installed successfully using the Media tool. (Windows Update kept failing.)
Having trouble installing nvidia drivers. Downloaded the new one but it won't install, old ones won't uninstall.
Meh. I'll get it.
That worked. *sigh*Try restarting your pc. Worked for me. Allowed me to install the W10 driver.
Yeah, unless I get an actual, unique, installation product key for Windows 10, during the upgrade process, I'm not going to do it. Screw having to rely on MS's servers to "remember" that I'm a valid Win10 user. Or having to use an MSID (and still use MS's servers to remember).
Yeah, I have the same issue. My Win7 key is a TechNet key that's been in use for years and has activated on at least two different motherboards over those years. I installed 10 on a spare SDD so I am good.
"The activation server determined the specified product key has been blocked"
I'm going to consider this bogus for now and see if the dust settles soon. I installed it on my desktop but I use my laptop 99% of the time so it's no biggee.
I see that I can't do any customizations until I have a valid key installed. Niiiice. I can't even change the screen resolution. I can barely read anything right now.
But I did not take advantage of the free upgrade offer. I had the eval copy installed on a spare SSD. One option now would be to wait until I get notified the upgrade is ready to be installed on the PC in question which is running Win7, install it and hope for the best. I downloaded a fresh copy of the final release using the Media Creation Tool and did a clean install on that same spare SSD wiping the existing partitions as part of the process. If I'd done an upgrade on that I might have been OK. Just to be clear, my Win7 is safe and secure on another SSD.If you upgraded to Windows 10 on this PC by taking advantage of the free upgrade offer and successfully activated Windows 10 on this PC in the past, you won't have a Windows 10 product key, and you can skip the product key page by selecting the Skip button. Your PC will activate online automatically so long as the same edition of Windows 10 was successfully activated on this PC by using the free Windows 10 upgrade offer.