F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Users transitioning from Windows to Windows 10 face restrictions without cost.

Users transitioning from Windows to Windows 10 face restrictions without cost.

Users transitioning from Windows to Windows 10 face restrictions without cost.

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DriveIn
Senior Member
739
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM
#1
I operate on a Windows 8.1 USB, essentially a portable workstation. I realize the origin here is personal, yet I thought it worth sharing. There are three options for upgrading Windows 10. Below are the details for clarity. 1. Through the system tray alert. 2. Using the media builder utility. 3. Via a UEFI bootable USB stick. Now, if you try method one, an error appears and you’re taken to the media builder. When you move to method two from there, you must generate installation media on another flash drive because upgrading directly in a Windows-to-go setup isn’t possible. Thus, you make a UEFI bootable USB to switch to Windows 10 on your USB drive (I use an 840 Pro over USB 3) and try this route. It asks for a product key. Your current 8.1 key won’t work; you need a Windows 10 key. You can choose to skip the key entry, but then it asks to restart into 8.1 and use the media builder again—essentially the same path that didn’t succeed before. The only viable option remains purchasing a Windows 10 license.
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DriveIn
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM #1

I operate on a Windows 8.1 USB, essentially a portable workstation. I realize the origin here is personal, yet I thought it worth sharing. There are three options for upgrading Windows 10. Below are the details for clarity. 1. Through the system tray alert. 2. Using the media builder utility. 3. Via a UEFI bootable USB stick. Now, if you try method one, an error appears and you’re taken to the media builder. When you move to method two from there, you must generate installation media on another flash drive because upgrading directly in a Windows-to-go setup isn’t possible. Thus, you make a UEFI bootable USB to switch to Windows 10 on your USB drive (I use an 840 Pro over USB 3) and try this route. It asks for a product key. Your current 8.1 key won’t work; you need a Windows 10 key. You can choose to skip the key entry, but then it asks to restart into 8.1 and use the media builder again—essentially the same path that didn’t succeed before. The only viable option remains purchasing a Windows 10 license.

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133
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM
#2
there might be other methods to convert a windows enterprise machine into a regular pc. otherwise, upgrading won’t be possible because enterprise isn’t recognized.
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DragonChaser35
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM #2

there might be other methods to convert a windows enterprise machine into a regular pc. otherwise, upgrading won’t be possible because enterprise isn’t recognized.

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DIPPY91
Member
216
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM
#3
It seems you're performing a fresh installation rather than an upgrade. You don't need to enter a key during the upgrade process. To upgrade your laptop, simply boot into Windows, locate the Windows Update or Recovery option, and follow the prompts to install the latest version.
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DIPPY91
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM #3

It seems you're performing a fresh installation rather than an upgrade. You don't need to enter a key during the upgrade process. To upgrade your laptop, simply boot into Windows, locate the Windows Update or Recovery option, and follow the prompts to install the latest version.

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techiseasy
Senior Member
688
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM
#4
You could set up Windows 8, 8 Pro, 8.1, or 8.1 Pro on a USB stick by using a UEFI bootable drive made from a Windows 7 UEFI creator tool. Simply pick a correctly formatted USB to install during setup.
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techiseasy
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM #4

You could set up Windows 8, 8 Pro, 8.1, or 8.1 Pro on a USB stick by using a UEFI bootable drive made from a Windows 7 UEFI creator tool. Simply pick a correctly formatted USB to install during setup.

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MrKiwiism
Member
236
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM
#5
Using the setup file generated on the USB stick requires booting from it, which triggers a prompt asking for a Windows 10 license. Choosing not to enter the key leads to the setup process failing.
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MrKiwiism
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM #5

Using the setup file generated on the USB stick requires booting from it, which triggers a prompt asking for a Windows 10 license. Choosing not to enter the key leads to the setup process failing.

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HorseyHay
Member
208
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM
#6
No key required. Just tap skip.
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HorseyHay
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM #6

No key required. Just tap skip.

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143
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM
#7
The issue arises when you choose to skip the process. It asks you to run the setup file directly on the installation media inside the windows-to-go workspace you're trying to upgrade from. This step then encounters failure, leading you to restart by booting from the media, and the problem repeats.
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DaniilKozhuhar
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM #7

The issue arises when you choose to skip the process. It asks you to run the setup file directly on the installation media inside the windows-to-go workspace you're trying to upgrade from. This step then encounters failure, leading you to restart by booting from the media, and the problem repeats.

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SSGSS_Saiyan
Member
160
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM
#8
Set up your portable USB drive with the configuration from the provided link.
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SSGSS_Saiyan
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM #8

Set up your portable USB drive with the configuration from the provided link.

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zLeoZiin
Senior Member
503
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM
#9
What you described matches the setup file you were expecting, but it isn’t functioning as intended.
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zLeoZiin
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM #9

What you described matches the setup file you were expecting, but it isn’t functioning as intended.

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walmartmic
Member
210
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM
#10
It seems you're feeling a bit overwhelmed. Would you like me to help you understand what you're reading?
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walmartmic
06-05-2024, 02:01 AM #10

It seems you're feeling a bit overwhelmed. Would you like me to help you understand what you're reading?

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