First Look: Installing Windows 10 as an in place Upgrade
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Well it is July 29th, 2015. Do you know what your users/clients are doing?
To be proactive about the upgrade, I had already worked out a process for doing this myself.
First, I have been using the Windows 10 Technical Preview for months on my MacBook Pro in a Parallels VM.
Second, I looked at my local devices and decided to run the install my my childrens laptop first because this laptop was new 6 months ago and has only had Chrome installed on it. There is not a much cleaner upgrade path than this.
Third, after upgrading the clean laptop I will upgrade my work desktop which has a boatload of applications installed.
Fourth, I plan to wipe my work desktop and install from scratch because a lot of those applications I no longer need and I like clean setups for things anyway.
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Get Started:
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License Agreement:
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Wait for it:
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Go Time:
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Note: As soon as you click "Start the upgrade now" your machine becomes unusable
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Don't forget ISO's are available too!
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Still waiting:
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Time to click through more things:
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Express Settings:
I generally find these settings to be fine for general users. -
Customize:
But as it is a new version of Windows, we should verify things. When you click customize on the prior screen, you will see three screens of choices you can turn on and off. -
Look, my default lock screen! Are we done? Not a chance..
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New sign in screen: In Windows 8.1 this had larger user pictures going across the screen. That was much easier for my 5 and 7 year old children to pick their account with.
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Going through the app setup like a completely new user account:
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Finally done:
One note, since this was an upgrade, Windows renamed the original C:\Windows folder to C:\Windows.old and installed Windows 10 in a new C:\Windows folder.
You will want to eventually run the disk cleanup tool and remove the prior version of Windows.
For this system, the prior version is taking 21GB of space.
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Overall seems like it went pretty smoothly.
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I remove the search box from the taskbar.
IMHO it takes up too much space on the taskbar, and if you start typing it starts searching anyways.
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@anonymous said:
I remove the search box from the taskbar.
IMHO it takes up too much space on the taskbar, and if you start typing it starts searching anyways.
I do also, but I left everything default for the screenshots. Well as default as possible since this was an upgrade and my background images synced through.
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@scottalanmiller said:
Overall seems like it went pretty smoothly.
I expected it to as there was nothing installed on the machine except Chrome, Greenshot, Avast Business, and the ScreenConnect agent.
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@JaredBusch I have been using Screenconnect client on all the Windows 10 builds, and there seems to be no issue there