drevilwebmster
Extraordinary Member
thanks downloaded and all set to go
When trying to read between the lines - getting to be difficult these days with MS!, it does look as though they themselves, may be the biggest abusers -or shall we say, they are using their discretion.It is open to abuse but in Australia ‘assisted technology’ translates as you are registerd with some form of organisation which is themselves registerd | certified by the government… so without trying to be ageist, I’d suggest a trip to your local optometrist for an eye check would probably cover the selection requirments.
Snigger..tomorrow is going to be the biggest non-event ever.
well yes because an upgrade by iso is the normal way to upgrade Microsoft software... an update modifies your current product while an upgrade totally replaces it.Isn't that normal, if you are applying an ISO over an existing OS?
Still nothing over at MSDN..
>>>Interesting!! Well, I got it to work with the W10 ALL-VERSIONS ISO file on my Dell E520! Funny how the W10 PRO 64bit ISO failed. The hdd was pretty clean except for a couple of non-RSC errors. I selected W10 Pro on the install option screen. Haven't tried the Home option yet, but I suspect that would work too. Oh, and I made a mental error on the 2nd PC I tried the Pro ISO file on, and that's a Dell OptiPlex GX520 (about 9-1/2 yrs. old). That machine is 32bit, and all the 3 download ISO's Mike gave us links to are only for 64bit machines!! So, I doubt it will install the W10 ALL-VERSIONS ISO file at all. That's Ok, I'm guessing MS will make the Anniversary Update push file tomorrow to work on both 32bit and 64bit, don't you think?? There are still lot's of people who have vista-era and W7/8x-era laptops, and many of them are 32bit only such as my Sony Vaio (2008). This Sony laptop is running W10 Home Activated and was my first legit W10 Activated machine. I'm hoping it takes the Anniversary Update without issue. Thanks for letting me know that W10 PRO 64bit ISO file worked elsewhere though! <<<well yes because an upgrade by iso is the normal way to upgrade Microsoft software... an update modifies your current product while an upgrade totally replaces it.
my point is power outage or internet | network fails during the process can be very bad and you should consider doing a fresh install if the upgrade runs into errors.
p.s, most people will have home edition BigBearJedi but I know at least two people that have loaded that Pro iso and the files are solid... luck mate!