Windows to Windows
Thursday, September 8, 2016 by kona0197 | Discussion: Personal Computing
So I got a good deal on a notebook at a local pawn shop. Using it now. The shop had upgraded it to Windows 10. When I got it home I did a complete factory reset and that reinstalled Windows 8.1. Now since the free upgrade to 10 is over with, does anyone know if I can go back to 10 for free somehow?
Reply #2 Friday, September 9, 2016 8:10 AM
Reply #4 Saturday, September 10, 2016 5:25 PM
that would be them relying on you to be honest about needing accessibility aid. do tape up your cameras though.. you know win10 spying on you and all ![]()
Reply #5 Saturday, September 10, 2016 5:37 PM
They'll know if you've been using any such aids already. 'Course, I suppose you could go blind at any moment.
Reply #6 Sunday, September 11, 2016 9:13 AM
I'm guessing that qualifying is a tad more complex than just taking your word......
Reply #7 Monday, September 12, 2016 2:21 PM
Thanks guys. I found the Windows 10 ISO file at Microsoft. Downloaded it, installed it, and it activated just fine. Was gonna use Windows 8 for a bit, but it proved to be highly annoying. Had to turn off a bunch of privacy settings in 10, but otherwise I'm set.
Reply #8 Tuesday, September 13, 2016 7:55 PM
Hey everyone. One last question. It seems to me that Windows 8 booted quicker, and woke up from sleeping faster than 10. It's only a 2.2 GHz dual core Celeron machine, with 4GB DDR3 for RAM, so I am curious if Windows 10 is too much for the system to handle. :/
Reply #9 Tuesday, September 13, 2016 8:00 PM
Hey everyone. One last question. It seems to me that Windows 8 booted quicker, and woke up from sleeping faster than 10. It's only a 2.2 GHz dual core Celeron machine, with 4GB DDR3 for RAM, so I am curious if Windows 10 is too much for the system to handle. :/
Windows 10, on clean install, is much faster than Windows 7 or 8. Now as far of the rest of it, that's another question, the UI and a lot of features of course suck.
I have a Dell I7 that had Windows 10 on it kona, with 4GB of DDR3 RAM, and it was really slow to me. So I just upgraded it to a Samsung EVO 1TB SSD, and now it's a LOT faster! Your system specs should be fine with Windows 10, but you also might consider putting an SSD in, to me it made a world of difference.
Reply #10 Tuesday, September 13, 2016 8:23 PM
I have thought about a SSD, but sadly it's a low end laptop, so there's no ports to access on the bottom to change out the hard drive or RAM. Even the battery is non removeable. ![]()
Reply #11 Wednesday, September 14, 2016 11:36 AM
Odd, a laptop that has to be thrown away if the hard drive fails?
Reply #13 Wednesday, September 14, 2016 2:00 PM
Most laptops are that way. The only way to do anything is send it to the manufacturer, and it is limited. That is how you can carry it everywhere. It is called sodering.
Reply #14 Wednesday, September 14, 2016 2:46 PM
The laptop is a Asus X551M. Found a video about how to change out the drive, it evolves taking the whole bottom off the laptop. Way to much for me to attempt.
Reply #15 Wednesday, September 14, 2016 4:07 PM
Are there usb external ssd drives. That would work
Reply #16 Wednesday, September 14, 2016 4:38 PM
Well the 500 GB hard drive it came with isn't dead yet. Not even close. ![]()
Reply #17 Wednesday, September 14, 2016 7:22 PM
Having installed Win10 on hundreds of systems I've found a HUGE bottleneck with hard drive activity on boot.
Not entirely sure what it is that is happening but it drove me nuts on my home PC. (Dell XPS8500).
Boot time was unbearable with my SATA drive with nearly 4-5 mins before disk usage was below 100%.
I invested 90 bux on a Samsung 850 EVO 250GB SSD.
Now, from the time I see the BIOS log to a usable desktop... less than 10 seconds.
Note - This scenario is not confined to just my system. I've seen it on many others.
Some laptops were 5400 RPM drives and I went to 7200 RPM and gained significant time as well.
Reply #18 Wednesday, September 14, 2016 8:58 PM
Most laptops are that way. The only way to do anything is send it to the manufacturer, and it is limited. That is how you can carry it everywhere. It is called sodering.
I have never seen one that didn't.
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Reply #1 Thursday, September 8, 2016 9:24 PM
Yes, you can. The laptop has already been register with 10.
Only way you can't go back to 10 for free on a PC/Laptop that has already had 10 on it is if you change motherboards. Hence the MS rule that 10 is free on that PC for the life of the PC (motherboard).
Hard drives can be changed out, no problem.
Yes, again, you can put 10 on it, and it will activate.