The Windows 10 upgrade
process drags old files, settings, and programs from your previous
Windows system to your new one. Microsoft allows you to get an entirely
fresh system by performing a clean install, but the activation process
can be a bit confusing.
This is also useful if you’ve purchased a new Windows 10 PC and it
includes manufacturer-installed bloatware you don’t want. Or, you may
need to perform a clean install on a computer without an existing
Windows system after installing a new hard drive.
Note that you won’t be eligible for the free “Windows DVD Player” app
offered to users of Windows Media Center if you perform a clean
install. However, you can always install VLC to get DVD playback or use one of the more fully featured Windows Media Center alternatives.
The Easy Alternative: Perform a Reset and Remove Everything
There’s an alternative to clean-installing. You can use the Reset feature to reset your Windows 10 system back to its fresh state.
If you installed Windows 10 yourself, this should give you a fresh
Windows system. If you purchased a computer that came with Windows 10,
this will likely bring back the bloatware that came with your Windows 10
PC. (There should be a way to prevent Windows 10’s Reset function from reinstalling the bloatware, but we’ll need to get our hands on a PC that comes with Windows 10 before we can find out how.)
Note that this may not be the perfect solution — while it should give
you a perfectly like-new Windows system, some people have reported that
it won’t fix some system corruption issues, in which case you’d want to
perform a real clean install.
To reset your Windows 10 PC, open the Settings app, select Update
& security, select Recovery, and click the “Get started” button
under Reset this PC. Select “Remove everything.” This will wipe all your
files, so be sure you have backups.
For the Free Upgrade: Have You Upgraded and Activated Your Windows 10 System?
If you want to perform a clean install of Windows 10 and haven’t
upgraded to Windows 10 yet on your Windows 7 or 8.1 PC, you have some
extra work to do. You’ll need to take advantage of Microsoft’s upgrade
offer before performing a clean install. (Obviously, if you have a PC
that came with Windows 10 or you’ve purchased your own Windows 10
license, this isn’t necessary.)
When you upgrade a Windows 7 or 8.1 system to Windows 10, the installer confirms that you have a “genuine Windows”
system installed and activates your computer for use with Windows 10.
Note that you don’t actually get a Windows 10 product key — instead,
your computer’s hardware is registered with Microsoft’s servers. When
you install Windows 10 on that PC again in the future, it will check in
with Microsoft’s servers, confirm it’s installed on a registered PC, and
automatically activate itself.
If you don’t take advantage of the upgrade process first, this
registration will never happen. There’s no way to enter a Windows 7 or
8.1 key into the Windows 10 installer, nor is there some sort of web
form that will give you a Windows 10 key if you provide your Windows 7
or 8.1 key. Sorry — you’ll have to upgrade to Windows 10 before you can
perform a clean install.
If you need to upgrade, you can download Microsoft’s Windows 10 media creation tool
and tell it to “Upgrade this PC now.” It will automatically upgrade you
to Windows 10 if your PC is running a genuine version of Windows 7 or
Windows 8.1.
Once you’re done, confirm that Windows 10 is activated before
performing a clean install. You can check this by opening Settings,
selecting Update & Security, and selecting Activation.
Verify that you see “Windows is activated” here. Also, note the
edition of Windows 10 you have installed — either Windows 10 Home or
Windows 10 Pro. Most people will receive the Home edition as part
of the free upgrade, but you’ll get Windows 10 Pro if you previously had a Professional edition of Windows 7 or 8.1 installed.
If Windows 10 isn’t activated, don’t try to perform a clean install until it is.
Download Windows 10 and Create Installation Media
Even if your Windows system has already been upgraded with the “Get Windows 10″ reservation process, you’ll need to download Windows installation media to install Windows 10 from scratch.
Download the Windows 10 media creation tool from Microsoft.
This tool will download the correct Windows 10 installation files for
your system, and it also has built-in functions to create USB
installation media or burn an installer DVD. Select the “Create
installation media for another PC” option to create installation media.
Be sure to select the correct type of installation media for the copy
of Windows 10 that’s licensed for your PC — Windows 10 Home or
Professional. You should also choose your language and select whether
you want the 32-bit or 64-bit version of Windows
here — most people will want the 64-bit version. However, you can
create installation media that includes both the 32-bit and 64-bit
version, and the installer will automatically select the most
appropriate one when you use it to install Windows on a computer.
Install Windows 10 from the installation media like you would any
other operating system. Restart your computer with the USB drive or DVD
inserted and boot from that device. This may require you change a setting in the BIOS, access a boot menu, or use the “Use a device” option in the advanced startup options on a modern Windows 8 or 10 device that includes UEFI firmware instead of the traditional BIOS.
Select “Install Now” once the Windows installer starts. When you
reach a screen asking for your Windows 10 product key, click the Skip
button. You won’t actually have a Windows 10 product key if you took
advantage of the free upgrade offer.
If you do have a Windows 10 product key, enter it here.
Go through the setup process normally until you see the “Which type
of installation do you want?” screen. Select the “Custom” option to
ensure you’re performing a clean install and not an upgrade install.
Partition your system drive however you like. If you just have a
single Windows partition, you can tell the installer to overwrite it. If
you have many partitions, you could delete them all and tell Windows 10
to install itself in the unallocated space.
You’ll be asked for the product key after the process is finished.
Just click “Do this later” to skip this part and continue the setup
process.
After you log into your new, clean-installed Windows 10 system, it should automatically activate itself
after you connect to the Internet. If you took advantage of the free
upgrade offer, it does this by checking your computer’s hardware and
then checking in with Microsoft, verifying that your hardware
configuration is authorized to use Windows 10.
When we reinstalled Windows 10 Pro on our computer, it activated
immediately. But, if Microsoft’s activation servers are overloaded, so
it may take some time before your system activates. You can open the
Settings app, select Update & security, and select Activation to
check your activation status. If it’s not activated, you may see
information here that can help you activate.
Some people report having to reboot several times, while others have
just waited. The following command can force an activation to occur if
it’s not happening automatically after going through the steps above.
First, open an Administrator Command Prompt by right-clicking the Start
button or pressing Windows Key + X and selecting Command Prompt (Admin).
Type the following command and press Enter:
slmgr.vbs /ato
Many people report having to run this command several times. if you
see an error message, try rebooting and running it again, wait and run
it again, or just wait and let Windows activate automatically.
Microsoft’s servers may be overloaded at the moment you’re trying to
activate.
Microsoft’s free upgrade offer depends on your PC’s hardware so it
may not activate properly if you’ve swapped out hardware inside your PC.
You may need to call Microsoft and complete the phone activation
process, explaining what happened, if you changed the PC’s hardware
after taking advantage of the offer. The phone support line can give you
an activation code that will allow you to activate Windows 10, even if
it won’t activate automatically. However, you may have to provide
additional information.
Note that the free Windows 10 upgrade (as well as OEM copies of
Windows and pre-installed copies of Windows 10) can’t actually be
transferred to a separate PC. They’re tied to a single PC’s hardware.
Article Credit: HTG
Image Credit: Brett Morrison on Flickr
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