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Upgrades

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  • P PJ Arends

    I am just wondering something. In the threads below I am reading about people having disasterous times upgrading their machines to Win 10, and then someone replies that they had no problems at all. What is the relative age of the hardware of those with problems compared to those with no problems at all? I am betting the newer the hardware, the less problems being had. My machine is 5 years old and running Win 7. Should I attempt to upgrade? I am thinking not.

    Within you lies the power for good - Use it!

    Y Offline
    Y Offline
    Yusuf
    wrote on last edited by
    #27

    I'm not sure if age is a factor. :-O I upgraded almost 5 years Lenovo Yoga two weeks back with no problem, well sort of. Initially I kept getting errors after errors. After some googling and looking up on MS site, it turned out to be AV related. I disabled Windows Defendor and it completed with no hiccups. With that been said, I won't rule age out :~

    Yusuf May I help you?

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    • J Jorgen Andersson

      See my answer to Jochen.

      Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

      L Offline
      L Offline
      Lost User
      wrote on last edited by
      #28

      Yes, but he seems to think the November release of Win 10 will accept Windows 7/8 keys which would eliminate the need for that step. I have no idea if his statement about the Win 7/8 keys is true.

      There are two types of people in this world: those that pronounce GIF with a soft G, and those who do not deserve to speak words, ever.

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      • J Jorgen Andersson

        Is AOMEI a general recommendation? I always used Ghost in the old times, but I don't have access to it anymore.

        Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

        OriginalGriffO Offline
        OriginalGriffO Offline
        OriginalGriff
        wrote on last edited by
        #29

        Update: The latest version of AOMEI appears to have gone all Windows 10 - the UI is the same, but twice the size! :omg: But I fixed it: Menu...Settings...Other, "Enable Large Window Mode" tick. "OK". Restart now. Menu...Settings...Other, "Enable Large Window Mode" untick. "OK". Restart now. Much better!

        Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...

        "I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
        "Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt

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        • L Lost User

          Yes, but he seems to think the November release of Win 10 will accept Windows 7/8 keys which would eliminate the need for that step. I have no idea if his statement about the Win 7/8 keys is true.

          There are two types of people in this world: those that pronounce GIF with a soft G, and those who do not deserve to speak words, ever.

          J Offline
          J Offline
          Jorgen Andersson
          wrote on last edited by
          #30

          I don't know either, but I wouldn't take any chances until I read it on Microsofts site.

          Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

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          • J Jorgen Andersson

            I don't know either, but I wouldn't take any chances until I read it on Microsofts site.

            Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

            L Offline
            L Offline
            Lost User
            wrote on last edited by
            #31

            True - however its a non-issue for me right now. At home, while my 7 year old iMac likely has the horsepower to dual-boot Windows 10 the folks at Apple chose not to create drivers for it so I'm plateaued at Windows 7. At work, my 3 year old Dell laptop might be fully supported by Windows 10 but the Siemens software I use everyday isn't and never will be so I'm plateaued at Windows 7. Good thing I like Windows 7... :-D

            There are two types of people in this world: those that pronounce GIF with a soft G, and those who do not deserve to speak words, ever.

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            • P PJ Arends

              I am just wondering something. In the threads below I am reading about people having disasterous times upgrading their machines to Win 10, and then someone replies that they had no problems at all. What is the relative age of the hardware of those with problems compared to those with no problems at all? I am betting the newer the hardware, the less problems being had. My machine is 5 years old and running Win 7. Should I attempt to upgrade? I am thinking not.

              Within you lies the power for good - Use it!

              J Offline
              J Offline
              Joe Woodbury
              wrote on last edited by
              #32

              I upgraded my 4 year old home system to Windows 10. It worked through the first reboot and then got increasingly worse until it wouldn't boot at all. I put Windows 8.1 on and it works fine (yes, I'm one of those who actually likes 8.1) and is slightly more stable than Windows 7 was on that box. My oldest daughter upgraded to windows 10 on her six year old Inspiron (which she inherited from her sister) and it apparently went perfect. And she likes it. My ex-wife's Inspiron laptop, however, is reported to have serious problems with Windows 10--IIRC, after booting, you have to close it, let it sleep and then open and wake it. She chose not to try it, though I think it would help her laptop performance if it fully worked. My two sons and youngest daughter all chose to not upgrade. The sons because they don't want to deal with it and the daughter because she didn't like it (after trying it out at Best Buy on the same Asus laptop which she has.) The Windows 8.x and 10 kernels are very good and leaner than Windows 7, but peripheral support for Windows 10 seems rather inconsistent.

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              • K kmoorevs

                I am on the verge of reinstalling Win7 on a 6 year old desktop. So, why not just go with the hive and go with the latest and greatest? Because I like 7 better than 10. I am familiar/comfortable and productive with it. I have it on a new laptop, and don't see enough new features that make it worthwhile...I don't need Cortana, Edge, or that big ugly start menu! :laugh:

                "Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse

                J Offline
                J Offline
                Joe Woodbury
                wrote on last edited by
                #33

                kmoorevs wrote:

                big ugly start menu!

                Funny that you said that since both my youngest daughter and I find the Windows 8.x start screen much more usable than that [Windows 10] "menu". The white on black jump lists also annoyed the crap out of me. Oh, and Edge is atrociously bad.

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                • P PJ Arends

                  I am just wondering something. In the threads below I am reading about people having disasterous times upgrading their machines to Win 10, and then someone replies that they had no problems at all. What is the relative age of the hardware of those with problems compared to those with no problems at all? I am betting the newer the hardware, the less problems being had. My machine is 5 years old and running Win 7. Should I attempt to upgrade? I am thinking not.

                  Within you lies the power for good - Use it!

                  C Offline
                  C Offline
                  cjb110
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #34

                  It's not the age of the hardware itself, its the length of time the OS its currently on has had time to rot. Windows 10 will be fine on a fresh install, its just less likely on a upgrade install, as it wont be able to undo all the abuse you've been giving it for 5 years.

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                  • OriginalGriffO OriginalGriff

                    Do a full backup first (AOMEI is good, and free) Upgrade. Download ISO version. Reformat HDD and install from ISO. Reinstall software. Reload data from backup (AOMEI allows you to load a backup as a virtual drive, so you can do an image restore to get back to your Win 7 setup, or access just the files you want from the backup set) Don't try to miss any stages... :laugh: You will likely get some grief - the 7 -> 10 upgrade can be awkward - but provided you do a proper install after the upgrade you should be able to minimize them. Is it good? Well...a bit. It's uglier than Win 7, any old hardware may not have drivers and it's badly integrated. But it is the way forward unfortunately, so at some point you will have to move.

                    Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...

                    X Offline
                    X Offline
                    xiecsuk
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #35

                    Before you do anything, make sure your current system has been activated. Mine wasn't and I didn't realise it. I bought it installed on a new machine I had built and assumed it was pukka. When I tried to install the ISO, it wouldn't. I was then left with having to buy a legitimate copy just to get Win10 installed.

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                    • OriginalGriffO OriginalGriff

                      Mail is a pile of poo - it doesn't event register itself properly as the mail application (because it's a "Metro" app and they don't play nice with desktop ones). So you can right click an image or file, and select "Send to...Mail recipient" and it does a total of nothing. "Forward to" seems to disappear on a regular basis as well... Install Windows Live Mail (from the Windows Essentials download pack) and you get a much better email client that works like Outlook Express used to, only better. Only gripe is that it doesn't show a tray icon for "new mail". Edge is IE for win 10 - run once, install something better, and then ignore it for ever more! :laugh:

                      Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...

                      X Offline
                      X Offline
                      xiecsuk
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #36

                      I'll go along with that. After trying Edge for a week, I've installed Internet Explorer from Win8; much better. And after trying the Mail app, I've installed Windows Live Mail. Again, much better.

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                      • P PJ Arends

                        I am just wondering something. In the threads below I am reading about people having disasterous times upgrading their machines to Win 10, and then someone replies that they had no problems at all. What is the relative age of the hardware of those with problems compared to those with no problems at all? I am betting the newer the hardware, the less problems being had. My machine is 5 years old and running Win 7. Should I attempt to upgrade? I am thinking not.

                        Within you lies the power for good - Use it!

                        G Offline
                        G Offline
                        Gary Wheeler
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #37

                        I'm running a 7 year-old ACER laptop that started life with Windows Vista. I upgraded to Windows 7, and then to Windows 10. The only problem upgrading to 10 was a driver in my anti-virus package that needed an update, and my employer's VPN app no longer works. Both of these issues are the responsibility of the application creator and not Windows 10. I have a fairly spartan machine: Office, several versions of Visual Studio, Chrome, Thunderbird, and VirtualBox are my principal big-ticket applications. I don't run games or any apps with complex driver requirements. I've noticed through 30 years of Windows upgrades that the people who have the most problems are the ones who, for whatever reason, have a lot of complicated applications installed. Photoshop, DBMS's, non-Microsoft IDE's, and custom hardware to name a few. I don't think it's realistic to expect a pain-free upgrade in that case. It's probably more prudent to do a clean install and then re-install each application, one by one, and check your stability after each install. While it's painful, it's probably more productive to do it that way than searching for the proverbial needle in a haystack after an in-place upgrade.

                        Software Zen: delete this;

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                        • J Jorgen Andersson

                          I don't know either, but I wouldn't take any chances until I read it on Microsofts site.

                          Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

                          M Offline
                          M Offline
                          milo xml
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #38

                          It's true. I had an HP Win 7 computer sitting around that was all jacked up with viruses. I saw in one of the articles that you could download the iso. Went to the site and found Microsoft has a utility that will set up a thumb drive for you to do the installation. About 90 minutes later I had a full, clean install of Win 10 running on that machine using the HP Win 7 license. I should note that I had to change the boot order for some reason before it would allow me to choose the hard drive for installation.

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                          • P PJ Arends

                            I am just wondering something. In the threads below I am reading about people having disasterous times upgrading their machines to Win 10, and then someone replies that they had no problems at all. What is the relative age of the hardware of those with problems compared to those with no problems at all? I am betting the newer the hardware, the less problems being had. My machine is 5 years old and running Win 7. Should I attempt to upgrade? I am thinking not.

                            Within you lies the power for good - Use it!

                            K Offline
                            K Offline
                            Kirk 10389821
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #39

                            With a 5 year old computer. You are probable looking to upgrade in 2-3 years MAX. If there was EVER a reason to wait. You Found it!

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                            • P PJ Arends

                              I am just wondering something. In the threads below I am reading about people having disasterous times upgrading their machines to Win 10, and then someone replies that they had no problems at all. What is the relative age of the hardware of those with problems compared to those with no problems at all? I am betting the newer the hardware, the less problems being had. My machine is 5 years old and running Win 7. Should I attempt to upgrade? I am thinking not.

                              Within you lies the power for good - Use it!

                              S Offline
                              S Offline
                              svella
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #40

                              The only upgrade to Win 10 that I have done is on a VMWare Fusion VM running on a Mac mini (Late 2012). No problems whatsoever that I'm aware of, but then I've probably only spent an hour total using it since I upgraded in August, since I rarely have a use for Windows Desktop. I have both Windows Server 2008R2 and 2012 VM's that I run much more often since I need to be able to develop/test against Active Directory.

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                              • P PJ Arends

                                I am just wondering something. In the threads below I am reading about people having disasterous times upgrading their machines to Win 10, and then someone replies that they had no problems at all. What is the relative age of the hardware of those with problems compared to those with no problems at all? I am betting the newer the hardware, the less problems being had. My machine is 5 years old and running Win 7. Should I attempt to upgrade? I am thinking not.

                                Within you lies the power for good - Use it!

                                C Offline
                                C Offline
                                coding4ever
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #41

                                I successfully upgraded a 5 year old Dell XPS from Win7 to 10. Granted it's my gaming rig so the hardware was top of the line when I got it. It also doesn't have all the tools and apps my Dev machine does so I avoided those common pitfalls. I also upgraded two other Win 8.1 devices (one for the wife one for the kids) that were less than a year old and had no problems either. My parents upgraded a 2 year old desktop from 7 to 10 and the only issue they had was an ancient printer (ancient being about 4 years old) that didn't have drivers. HP was nice enough to point us to a driver for a newer printer that was Win10 compatible and worked with their printer. The biggest issue I've seen has been older hardware not being compatible and causing issues (and it's usually laptop hardware).

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                                • P PJ Arends

                                  I am just wondering something. In the threads below I am reading about people having disasterous times upgrading their machines to Win 10, and then someone replies that they had no problems at all. What is the relative age of the hardware of those with problems compared to those with no problems at all? I am betting the newer the hardware, the less problems being had. My machine is 5 years old and running Win 7. Should I attempt to upgrade? I am thinking not.

                                  Within you lies the power for good - Use it!

                                  D Offline
                                  D Offline
                                  Dan Neely
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #42

                                  My Early 2013 HP Envy X2 laptop fell into the "fun" category. After getting the all clear from the MS app I decided on a clean install (wanted to confirm that the performance issues I was running into were slow hardware not OS rot). In retrospect I think this was probably a mistake. After the install I didn't have a working keyboard, touchpad, or wifi. I had a spare keyboard, mouse, and ethernet dongle; unfortunately I only had 2 USB ports and no spare hub. That made phase one of find and install the elephanting drivers oh so much fun. HP (sunshines) didn't have any W10 drivers out for it; fortunately all but one of the W8 drivers installed. Unfortunately the one that didn't was for wifi; its installer just crashed. Broadcom (also sunshines) didn't appear to offer any Windows drivers on their page. They did have Linux drivers but it looked like they were kernel version specific blobs and were last built in January making them sunshines thrice over. My route for a working wifi driver lead from Google to ScummyPretendDriverDownloadsThatActuallyAreCrapwareInstallers.com X| X| X| which in between all the malicious download links did list a few driver builds that supposedly would install on W10. I was able to throw those version numbers back into Google; and on the second try got a driver that installed and worked on my laptop via the support page for an Asus laptop. (I think, might've been Lenovo's driver that worked for me instead.) I haven't updated my desktop yet (waiting for over xmas/newyears break just in case something goes wrong) but it's a year old DIY build; and the vendors of enthusiast parts are generally very good about making drivers available for newer (and older) OSes. Also on my do over the holidays list is an older desktop running W7; and if possible, a 9yo Core (1) Duo laptop that shipped with Vista. The latter currently has a botched W7 install my brother tried to do while he was (ab)using it. If I can't get anything newer on the laptop; I won't be that upset. However I would like to restore it to functioning emergency loaner status. (My brother ended up with it after he managed to drop his thinkpad enough times that he broke the spillproof tray under the keyboard and poured coffee down the crack.)

                                  Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, waging all things in the balance of reason? Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • P PJ Arends

                                    I am just wondering something. In the threads below I am reading about people having disasterous times upgrading their machines to Win 10, and then someone replies that they had no problems at all. What is the relative age of the hardware of those with problems compared to those with no problems at all? I am betting the newer the hardware, the less problems being had. My machine is 5 years old and running Win 7. Should I attempt to upgrade? I am thinking not.

                                    Within you lies the power for good - Use it!

                                    S Offline
                                    S Offline
                                    sasadler
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #43

                                    If the system is old now and running fine, I'd avoid upgrading (assuming you're running Win 7). You've got 5 more years of support and by then, your machine will be ancient and you'll be wanting to get a new machine anyways. This of course assumes there's nothing in Windows 10 that you truly need (DX12??). As a test, I initially upgraded an old (came with Vista) HP laptop to Win 10 and everything appeared to be working fine. Later I came across Windows update issue that I was able to fix with some research and a registry edit. However, the more I found out about the privacy/tracking issues and the forced updates issues in Windows 10 made me decide to put Mint Linux on the laptop. All the applications I use are available on Windows and Linux so it was an easy decision. I've been running it for over a month now and have had no issues what so ever.

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                                    • M milo xml

                                      It's true. I had an HP Win 7 computer sitting around that was all jacked up with viruses. I saw in one of the articles that you could download the iso. Went to the site and found Microsoft has a utility that will set up a thumb drive for you to do the installation. About 90 minutes later I had a full, clean install of Win 10 running on that machine using the HP Win 7 license. I should note that I had to change the boot order for some reason before it would allow me to choose the hard drive for installation.

                                      J Offline
                                      J Offline
                                      Jorgen Andersson
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #44

                                      :thumbsup: I assume you need to use the computer you want to upgrade when you set up that thumbdrive.

                                      Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

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                                      • J Jorgen Andersson

                                        :thumbsup: I assume you need to use the computer you want to upgrade when you set up that thumbdrive.

                                        Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

                                        M Offline
                                        M Offline
                                        milo xml
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #45

                                        Nope. I used my regular computer to do it. It also gives me the option to install 32 or 64 bit when it boots from the drive. Here's the link. https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/software-download/windows10[^] Now, in fairness, this might have been a bit more complicated if the installation media didn't have the drivers for the network adapter on that computer.

                                        J 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • M milo xml

                                          Nope. I used my regular computer to do it. It also gives me the option to install 32 or 64 bit when it boots from the drive. Here's the link. https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/software-download/windows10[^] Now, in fairness, this might have been a bit more complicated if the installation media didn't have the drivers for the network adapter on that computer.

                                          J Offline
                                          J Offline
                                          Jorgen Andersson
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #46

                                          Good info, thanks.

                                          Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

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