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Split the EULA discussion out to this thread. Keep this thread about the last time you did a free in-place upgrade.
When I actually upgrade I use my ISO and go. I image first just in case.Downloaded the Microsoft Windows 10 Media Creation tool...ran it...fire in the hole...done in an hour.
That probably wasn’t a technical upgrade. That was probably a win 10 system downgraded to Windows 7. So it has a win 10 key in the bios.Just completed one today as well. Dell Precision workstation from January of 2016, came loaded with Win7 Pro from the factory. After passing hardware diagnostics and doing some minor cleanup, like @YeOldeStonecat I used Dell Command Update to update the BIOS and drivers to the latest, took a Fabs backup, cloned the HD to a new Samsung SSD with their data migration tool, swapped drives, booted into Windows, then plugged in a 20H2 flash drive created with the media creation tool and ran setup.exe from within Windows. The upgrade was completed inside of 20 minutes. I loaded a single update, checked again with Dell Command Update for new drivers, loaded 3 & out the door she went.
Correct as usual, I should have pointed that out.That probably wasn’t a technical upgrade. That was probably a win 10 system downgraded to Windows 7. So it has a win 10 key in the bios.
When I actually upgrade I use my ISO and go. I image first just in case.
If there is no specialty software other than a printer driver I do prefer clean installs. Being residential it is mostly like that.
Reinstalling has NOTHING to do with the upgrade. Once you install Windows 10, no matter HOW you get there, a unique hardware hash code is created that is stored on Microsoft Servers. They could discontinue the upgrade but reinstalls would always work. It’s also why you never need ANY COA key on a reinstall. The hash code on file is your key for activation.If MS shut the door they'd have screaming customers everywhere not able to reinstall due to whatever reason.
Reinstalling has NOTHING to do with the upgrade. Once you install Windows 10, no matter HOW you get there, a unique hardware hash code is created that is stored on Microsoft Servers. They could discontinue the upgrade but reinstalls would always work. It’s also why you never need ANY COA key on a reinstall. The hash code on file is your key for activation.
My point is... crap happens, and that online hash is NOT always accurate.
I've never had a machine that I've used the COA sticker once on, ever need it again either.
I had 20 Windows 8 based Lenovo systems that I had to reimage because MS wouldn't fix it. The problem? The upgrade was based on Lenovo's OEM install, and I was required to do fresh installations on each one with the key in the BIOS... which had to be manually pulled because reasons... to achieve activation.Well, I can't disagree with your assertion about things occasionally going south. But, and it's an important one, I've never had an issue with Microsoft resolving it by phone when such has presented itself. And after that having been done once I doubt it will need to be done again.
I'm way more willing to presume a reinstall without key will work than it will not. Nothing is 100% except death and taxes.