Windows 10 boots slowly and may require troubleshooting steps.
Windows 10 boots slowly and may require troubleshooting steps.
I changed from Windows 7 Pro to Windows 10 Pro, but it still takes about 1 minute and 45 seconds to boot. A fresh installation might help. Your hard drive spins at 7.200 RPM and you haven’t installed any programs since formatting. The boot time depends on the drive type—some sources suggest around 8 seconds for an SSD, so a HDD could take longer.
A fresh setup should resolve the issue, likely requiring a partition refresh.
I've encountered some issues with key verification. My laptop comes with Windows 7, a legacy BIOS, and a GPR disk. I need to switch the BIOS to UEFI and set the disk to GPR, but it doesn't let me install Windows 7 on GPR. Even after changing the BIOS to UEFI, Windows 7 still boots from Legacy when updating or formatting. The MBR remains unchanged. After a clean install, Windows 10 on GPR doesn't verify the key properly. Anyone know if this is possible or should I stick with Legacy and MBR?
set up 7 using MBR and UEFI, then upgrade to version 10. After the upgrade, perform a clean installation and wipe all partitions—installer will create new GPT files or you can handle them manually via DiskPart during Windows 10 setup.
I installed it in UEFI and GPT successfully. However, your Windows isn't starting yet. The activation process can vary depending on the system and settings, so it may take a few minutes to a few hours.
You likely made mistakes in the process. First, install Windows 7 following the provided instructions. Next, install the network adapter drivers. Then activate Windows 7. After that, download the Windows 10 installation tool. Prepare a Windows 10 install USB using the appropriate version—Windows 10 Pro for 7 Pro/Ultimate or Windows 10 Core for 7 Home/Basic. Finally, upgrade to Windows 10 from within the USB by clicking setup.exe. Once Windows 10 is installed and activated, boot from the USB stick and follow the clean installation steps outlined earlier.