E eRazor Active member Joined Nov 17, 2019 Posts 43 Location Virginia Dec 6, 2019 #21 softwaremaniac said: The CNBJ2530.DPB is a known bug in Windows 8/8.1 and has nothing to do with your errors. It is nothing to worry about. As for your errors, I'd try Windows 10. Click to expand... Thanks. The run time errors came back again right after I posted this. What do you think is going on?
softwaremaniac said: The CNBJ2530.DPB is a known bug in Windows 8/8.1 and has nothing to do with your errors. It is nothing to worry about. As for your errors, I'd try Windows 10. Click to expand... Thanks. The run time errors came back again right after I posted this. What do you think is going on?
S Sysnative Windows Update Inactive Joined Oct 9, 2014 Posts 773 Dec 6, 2019 #22 Not sure at this point. Let's see if the upgrade fixes it.
E eRazor Active member Joined Nov 17, 2019 Posts 43 Location Virginia Dec 9, 2019 #23 softwaremaniac said: Not sure at this point. Let's see if the upgrade fixes it. Click to expand... Have every thing together but am going to have questions. Where do I post them Win 8 or Win 10 upgrade? Such as, transferring programs, using Rufus with Win 10 install, etc?
softwaremaniac said: Not sure at this point. Let's see if the upgrade fixes it. Click to expand... Have every thing together but am going to have questions. Where do I post them Win 8 or Win 10 upgrade? Such as, transferring programs, using Rufus with Win 10 install, etc?
S Sysnative Windows Update Inactive Joined Oct 9, 2014 Posts 773 Dec 9, 2019 #24 Post your questions here. When you upgrade the system, your programs remain unaffected and are preserved. Download the Media Creation Tool and save this to your desktop. Go ahead and run this as well. Note: Click the Download tool now button when you get to this link. Accept the License Agreement Download the ISO file to your desktop. Double-click on the ISO and then run the setup to try and upgrade your machine. We want to get the ISO so that you don't have to keep downloading which can take hours.
Post your questions here. When you upgrade the system, your programs remain unaffected and are preserved. Download the Media Creation Tool and save this to your desktop. Go ahead and run this as well. Note: Click the Download tool now button when you get to this link. Accept the License Agreement Download the ISO file to your desktop. Double-click on the ISO and then run the setup to try and upgrade your machine. We want to get the ISO so that you don't have to keep downloading which can take hours.
E eRazor Active member Joined Nov 17, 2019 Posts 43 Location Virginia Dec 11, 2019 #25 softwaremaniac said: Post your questions here. When you upgrade the system, your programs remain unaffected and are preserved. Download the Media Creation Tool and save this to your desktop. Go ahead and run this as well. Note: Click the Download tool now button when you get to this link. Accept the License Agreement Download the ISO file to your desktop. Double-click on the ISO and then run the setup to try and upgrade your machine. We want to get the ISO so that you don't have to keep downloading which can take hours. Click to expand... So what you are saying is this: when I upgrade my computer stays the same with all my existing programs? I'd planned to do a clean install, then transfer all my stuff from this existing SSD. I don't need to do this? I bought a Win 10 USB install from Microsoft. It came with a little book which only says configure PC to boot from USB, turn off PC, insert USB and restart. Instructions say nothing more than to enter key number, I assumed it will over write everything. How does this ISO file you are talking about work? If I can keep all my programs and data I'll be very happy! I'm going to download the ISO file now and await your response.
softwaremaniac said: Post your questions here. When you upgrade the system, your programs remain unaffected and are preserved. Download the Media Creation Tool and save this to your desktop. Go ahead and run this as well. Note: Click the Download tool now button when you get to this link. Accept the License Agreement Download the ISO file to your desktop. Double-click on the ISO and then run the setup to try and upgrade your machine. We want to get the ISO so that you don't have to keep downloading which can take hours. Click to expand... So what you are saying is this: when I upgrade my computer stays the same with all my existing programs? I'd planned to do a clean install, then transfer all my stuff from this existing SSD. I don't need to do this? I bought a Win 10 USB install from Microsoft. It came with a little book which only says configure PC to boot from USB, turn off PC, insert USB and restart. Instructions say nothing more than to enter key number, I assumed it will over write everything. How does this ISO file you are talking about work? If I can keep all my programs and data I'll be very happy! I'm going to download the ISO file now and await your response.
E eRazor Active member Joined Nov 17, 2019 Posts 43 Location Virginia Dec 11, 2019 #26 Another question . . . that D:\Data on my SSD, will that get deleted by Win 10 so I just have one big C: drive like we were trying to do originally?
Another question . . . that D:\Data on my SSD, will that get deleted by Win 10 so I just have one big C: drive like we were trying to do originally?
S Sysnative Windows Update Inactive Joined Oct 9, 2014 Posts 773 Dec 11, 2019 #27 That is correct. I would strongly advise against cloning as I've seen cloning cause all kinds of issues. Windows 10 installation is free of charge. The iso file can either be used to upgrade the system directly or create an USB Win10 media (identical to the one you've bought). Nothing will get deleted if you upgrade. Regardless of the partition.
That is correct. I would strongly advise against cloning as I've seen cloning cause all kinds of issues. Windows 10 installation is free of charge. The iso file can either be used to upgrade the system directly or create an USB Win10 media (identical to the one you've bought). Nothing will get deleted if you upgrade. Regardless of the partition.
E eRazor Active member Joined Nov 17, 2019 Posts 43 Location Virginia Dec 11, 2019 #28 softwaremaniac said: That is correct. I would strongly advise against cloning as I've seen cloning cause all kinds of issues. Windows 10 installation is free of charge. The iso file can either be used to upgrade the system directly or create an USB Win10 media (identical to the one you've bought). Nothing will get deleted if you upgrade. Regardless of the partition. Click to expand... Great! I should do a backup first, right? I've got the ISO on my desktop and am copying it to a USB just in case. Can I rename the iso file? It is only named "windows" which I'm going to forget what version it is 6 months from now? Oh, do I need to collect all my program license keys first? Like MS Office 2010?
softwaremaniac said: That is correct. I would strongly advise against cloning as I've seen cloning cause all kinds of issues. Windows 10 installation is free of charge. The iso file can either be used to upgrade the system directly or create an USB Win10 media (identical to the one you've bought). Nothing will get deleted if you upgrade. Regardless of the partition. Click to expand... Great! I should do a backup first, right? I've got the ISO on my desktop and am copying it to a USB just in case. Can I rename the iso file? It is only named "windows" which I'm going to forget what version it is 6 months from now? Oh, do I need to collect all my program license keys first? Like MS Office 2010?
S Sysnative Windows Update Inactive Joined Oct 9, 2014 Posts 773 Dec 11, 2019 #29 You can back your data up, just in case, although, I don't expect any issues. Yes, you can rename it. You can if you wish, but you shouldn't need them. Windows 10 can usually transfer those without issue.
You can back your data up, just in case, although, I don't expect any issues. Yes, you can rename it. You can if you wish, but you shouldn't need them. Windows 10 can usually transfer those without issue.
E eRazor Active member Joined Nov 17, 2019 Posts 43 Location Virginia Dec 11, 2019 #30 softwaremaniac said: You can back your data up, just in case, although, I don't expect any issues. Yes, you can rename it. You can if you wish, but you shouldn't need them. Windows 10 can usually transfer those without issue. Click to expand... Thanks some more! You are the man! So very glad I checked out this forum and found you guys.
softwaremaniac said: You can back your data up, just in case, although, I don't expect any issues. Yes, you can rename it. You can if you wish, but you shouldn't need them. Windows 10 can usually transfer those without issue. Click to expand... Thanks some more! You are the man! So very glad I checked out this forum and found you guys.
E eRazor Active member Joined Nov 17, 2019 Posts 43 Location Virginia Dec 11, 2019 #32 softwaremaniac said: Click to expand... uh oh . . new problem. Some how Windows Boot Manager got on my laptop. I don't know how to get it to boot to USB first now. Used to be easy, just select "USB." Any ideas?
softwaremaniac said: Click to expand... uh oh . . new problem. Some how Windows Boot Manager got on my laptop. I don't know how to get it to boot to USB first now. Used to be easy, just select "USB." Any ideas?
S Sysnative Windows Update Inactive Joined Oct 9, 2014 Posts 773 Dec 11, 2019 #33 Navigate to your UEFI (press F2/Del/F10) on bootup and when you enter the setup, navigate to Boot options, change the Boot Order to USB and hit F10.
Navigate to your UEFI (press F2/Del/F10) on bootup and when you enter the setup, navigate to Boot options, change the Boot Order to USB and hit F10.
E eRazor Active member Joined Nov 17, 2019 Posts 43 Location Virginia Dec 11, 2019 #34 softwaremaniac said: Navigate to your UEFI (press F2/Del/F10) on bootup and when you enter the setup, navigate to Boot options, change the Boot Order to USB and hit F10. Click to expand... Can I just click on the desktop iso to install and worry about the USB boot later with Win 10 installed? If yes, please write me some instructions . . . remember I'm pretty thick about these matters. Also, do I need to sit here all the while it is upgrading like back in the day? You know, to answer questions about settings and such? Last edited: Dec 11, 2019
softwaremaniac said: Navigate to your UEFI (press F2/Del/F10) on bootup and when you enter the setup, navigate to Boot options, change the Boot Order to USB and hit F10. Click to expand... Can I just click on the desktop iso to install and worry about the USB boot later with Win 10 installed? If yes, please write me some instructions . . . remember I'm pretty thick about these matters. Also, do I need to sit here all the while it is upgrading like back in the day? You know, to answer questions about settings and such?
S Sysnative Windows Update Inactive Joined Oct 9, 2014 Posts 773 Dec 11, 2019 #35 Yes you can. I believe that you should just launch it, select Upgrade this PC now, accept the licence agreement and ensure you click on Keep files, apps and personal settings. The tool does the rest. No, you don't need to watch it.
Yes you can. I believe that you should just launch it, select Upgrade this PC now, accept the licence agreement and ensure you click on Keep files, apps and personal settings. The tool does the rest. No, you don't need to watch it.
E eRazor Active member Joined Nov 17, 2019 Posts 43 Location Virginia Dec 11, 2019 #36 softwaremaniac said: Yes you can. I believe that you should just launch it, select Upgrade this PC now, accept the licence agreement and ensure you click on Keep files, apps and personal settings. The tool does the rest. No, you don't need to watch it. Click to expand... Up and running . . . had an issue getting rid of Start8, used Revo uninstall, then put Classic Shell on. Tired now, I'll poke around on it tomorrow and let you know. Oh, it was a breeze to install, not the nightmare from days gone by . . . should have done it sooner!
softwaremaniac said: Yes you can. I believe that you should just launch it, select Upgrade this PC now, accept the licence agreement and ensure you click on Keep files, apps and personal settings. The tool does the rest. No, you don't need to watch it. Click to expand... Up and running . . . had an issue getting rid of Start8, used Revo uninstall, then put Classic Shell on. Tired now, I'll poke around on it tomorrow and let you know. Oh, it was a breeze to install, not the nightmare from days gone by . . . should have done it sooner!
S Sysnative Windows Update Inactive Joined Oct 9, 2014 Posts 773 Dec 11, 2019 #37 Excellent work! I am happy for you.
E eRazor Active member Joined Nov 17, 2019 Posts 43 Location Virginia Dec 12, 2019 #38 softwaremaniac said: Excellent work! I am happy for you. Click to expand... It installed Win 10 Home version. I thought all Win 10 were the same? Anyway, everything seems to be fine and running smooth. Should I run SFC to double check?
softwaremaniac said: Excellent work! I am happy for you. Click to expand... It installed Win 10 Home version. I thought all Win 10 were the same? Anyway, everything seems to be fine and running smooth. Should I run SFC to double check?