A quick one. The w10 upgrade is tied to the motherboard, correct?
So that means if I added more RAM which I plan to do soon, this will be fine?
yeah of course.
A quick one. The w10 upgrade is tied to the motherboard, correct?
So that means if I added more RAM which I plan to do soon, this will be fine?
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Whilst trying to download to USb using Media Creation Tool.
Anyone?
A quick one. The w10 upgrade is tied to the motherboard, correct?
So that means if I added more RAM which I plan to do soon, this will be fine?
How much free space do you have in drive C:?
Also disabled anti-virus then run setup again.
Not a lot since I started faffing about trying to get it to run last night. Had 4.6gb, now 1.6gb.
I got the same message when downloading it straight onto C (when I had 4.6gb), hence why I then tried to dl it onto USB.
I try to avoid posting opinions on the front page, but now that I've had the chance to do a clean install of the retail build of Windows 10 and delve into it, I feel compelled to share some thoughts with you. To me, Windows 10 is one step forward, two steps back. Sure, the interface is now unified, but Metro integration is now much harder to avoid as well, and user control has been diminished even further. Case in point: I wanted to set Windows Photo Viewer as my default image viewer, instead of the Photos app. In Windows 10, Microsoft has deliberately made this impossible to do without resorting to editing the Registry. Why? To unashamedly force you to use the Metro-based app. Similarly, the somewhat bloated new Start Menu seems to have interesting potential at first, until you realize that it is extremely limited in terms of customization options. Exploring its features, I quickly found that Windows 10 offers me virtually nothing new of practical use over Windows 8.1. Indeed users now have much less control over some features, such as the infamous Windows Update changes which see everyone forced to automatically accept updates. And of course MS has stepped up its efforts to foist its OneDrive and Bing services upon users through tighter integration, as well as mining your data wherever possible. Something has to pay for this free upgrade.
I could provide plenty more examples of annoying or counter-productive feature and UI changes and the forced use of watered-down Metro apps, which I believe outweigh the benefits of Windows 10. As harsh as it may seem, that's my honest opinion at the moment. Of all the versions of Windows I've used over the past 25+ years, Windows 10 has required the greatest amount of tweaking and use of third party programs to get it close to my desired state. Maybe MS will refine Windows 10 and offer greater choice. For now, I recommend sticking with Windows 7 or even Windows 8.1 if you value control over your OS and your data.
The longer I wait before installing win 10 the more and more problems keep coming up.
It's not like there is any rush to upgrade anyway. You have a whole year...

yeah of course.
Yes but it will probably need to be reactivated if the ms servers are still being hammered

The longer I wait before installing win 10 the more and more problems keep coming up.
Ah that explained error codes was caused by low space. Setup required 13GB free space to install Windows 10.
Try run disk cleanup to get rid of files and backup some data to free up 13GB space.
Possibly, but I am getting that error when also trying to download it onto usb.
I think the new Start Menu would be better if you could use the space on the right where pinned apps are to show your most used and recently installed apps instead. I don't really have any need to pin things there, so it's currently just a grey space apart from Calculator whilst the left side is far too busy.
Then remove the calculator, drag the grey space to the left using the edge of it, then leave most used apps on the left side...As you use Calculator often (I assume) it should stay there. OR pin it to your task bar