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Todd[_5_]
January 24th 15, 07:01 PM
Hi All,

I have noticed that previous Windows preview releases came
will a dated kill switch and they also would not allow you
to upgrade to the general release.

Does anyone know if the preview of 10

1) has a kill switch?

2) will it allow for an upgrade to the general release
or will it require a wipe and reinstall?

Many thanks,
-T

VanguardLH[_2_]
January 25th 15, 03:39 AM
Todd wrote:

> I have noticed that previous Windows preview releases came will a
> dated kill switch and they also would not allow you to upgrade to the
> general release. Does anyone know if the preview of 10
>
> 1) has a kill switch?

Sure. It's the Power button on the computer case. You might want to
elucidate on your inquiry. Are you asking about the 'taskill.exe'
program? If so, is it missing in your test instance of Windows 10?

> 2) will it allow for an upgrade to the general release or will it
> require a wipe and reinstall?

On possible scenario: you acquire a license (buy or get a free one
depending on how Microsoft decides to market Windows 10) or register to
get a license and go through the authentication process. You enter that
license's product key to authenticate the existing instance but as a new
license (with no expiration).

I'm sure others will come up with other possible scenarios. You
actually setup an instance of Windows 10 preview license as a production
host from which you want to upgrade? With any changes between now and
the public release, I'd prefer a clean install of the public release
rather than carry along any pollution from a test and work-in-progress
version of Windows.

Because of the problems of carrying along crap from a test version is
probably why the GA (general availability) release required a clean
installation. After all, that is the version that they will support,
not some frankenjob configuration.

VanguardLH[_2_]
January 25th 15, 03:39 AM
Todd wrote:

> I have noticed that previous Windows preview releases came will a
> dated kill switch and they also would not allow you to upgrade to the
> general release. Does anyone know if the preview of 10
>
> 1) has a kill switch?

Sure. It's the Power button on the computer case. You might want to
elucidate on your inquiry. Are you asking about the 'taskill.exe'
program? If so, is it missing in your test instance of Windows 10?

> 2) will it allow for an upgrade to the general release or will it
> require a wipe and reinstall?

On possible scenario: you acquire a license (buy or get a free one
depending on how Microsoft decides to market Windows 10) or register to
get a license and go through the authentication process. You enter that
license's product key to authenticate the existing instance but as a new
license (with no expiration).

I'm sure others will come up with other possible scenarios. You
actually setup an instance of Windows 10 preview license as a production
host from which you want to upgrade? With any changes between now and
the public release, I'd prefer a clean install of the public release
rather than carry along any pollution from a test and work-in-progress
version of Windows.

Because of the problems of carrying along crap from a test version is
probably why the GA (general availability) release required a clean
installation. After all, that is the version that they will support,
not some frankenjob configuration.

Todd[_5_]
January 25th 15, 05:18 AM
On 01/24/2015 06:39 PM, VanguardLH wrote:
> Because of the problems of carrying along crap from a test version is
> probably why the GA (general availability) release required a clean
> installation. After all, that is the version that they will support,
> not some frankenjob configuration.


Agreed. I would like fresh install.

By the way, I beta test Fedora Linux all the time. When
the general release comes out, the following upgrades
you in about 20 minutes. No test crap left over.

# yum upgrade

M$ could do the same, but ...

Todd[_5_]
January 25th 15, 05:18 AM
On 01/24/2015 06:39 PM, VanguardLH wrote:
> Because of the problems of carrying along crap from a test version is
> probably why the GA (general availability) release required a clean
> installation. After all, that is the version that they will support,
> not some frankenjob configuration.


Agreed. I would like fresh install.

By the way, I beta test Fedora Linux all the time. When
the general release comes out, the following upgrades
you in about 20 minutes. No test crap left over.

# yum upgrade

M$ could do the same, but ...

John Szalay
January 25th 15, 03:19 PM
Todd > wrote in :

> By kill switch I mean that after a particular date, the software
> will no longer function.
>
>>

according to the information on the insider forum,
after the expire date,
the software will start to shut itself down every two hours.

John Szalay
January 25th 15, 03:19 PM
Todd > wrote in :

> By kill switch I mean that after a particular date, the software
> will no longer function.
>
>>

according to the information on the insider forum,
after the expire date,
the software will start to shut itself down every two hours.

Todd[_5_]
January 26th 15, 01:01 AM
On 01/25/2015 06:19 AM, john szalay wrote:
> Todd > wrote in :
>
>> By kill switch I mean that after a particular date, the software
>> will no longer function.
>>
>>>
>
> according to the information on the insider forum,
> after the expire date,
> the software will start to shut itself down every two hours.
>
>


Thank you for the confirmation.

Todd[_5_]
January 26th 15, 01:01 AM
On 01/25/2015 06:19 AM, john szalay wrote:
> Todd > wrote in :
>
>> By kill switch I mean that after a particular date, the software
>> will no longer function.
>>
>>>
>
> according to the information on the insider forum,
> after the expire date,
> the software will start to shut itself down every two hours.
>
>


Thank you for the confirmation.

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