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#1
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Latest Windows Upgrade offer
This is the latest Win 8 upgrade offer in the UK. At 24.99 UKP it's a
good price. http://www.microsoftstore.com/store/...0/pgm.81522200 To get to it I clicked on the $39.99 latest offer in the US http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows/buy and then selected "Or get the upgrade on DVD from the Microsoft Store". Notice it transferred to the UK store but the only option is download and install. No DVD, and I can't see an option to download and save for installation later. My hardware won't do an upgrade install. I need the DVD to do a clean install if and when I want to get around to it. Bummer! -- Robin Bignall Herts, England |
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#2
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Latest Windows Upgrade offer
Robin Bignall wrote:
This is the latest Win 8 upgrade offer in the UK. At 24.99 UKP it's a good price. http://www.microsoftstore.com/store/...0/pgm.81522200 To get to it I clicked on the $39.99 latest offer in the US http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows/buy and then selected "Or get the upgrade on DVD from the Microsoft Store". Notice it transferred to the UK store but the only option is download and install. No DVD, and I can't see an option to download and save for installation later. My hardware won't do an upgrade install. I need the DVD to do a clean install if and when I want to get around to it. Bummer! When I did the electronic purchase for $39.99, the files downloaded into C:\ESD on the purchasing machine (my laptop). Initially I was concerned about losing the files. I didn't know where they were, looked in %temp% and so on. Anyway, if you run the tool again, it presents the same options for post-usage of the C:\ESD folder. It will make an ISO9660 file for you. It can also load a USB flash key with the files. I used the USB key option, but also had it prepare the ISO9660 file for storage on this machine. My desktop machine is where I installed the resulting 64 bit download. The order machine runs a 64 bit OS, so the purchase would be for 64 bit download as well. Then, I transferred over to the desktop machine, to do the actual install (previously, the desktop used a 32 bit OS). And, as a precaution, I also ran the upgrade tool on this machine, to make sure there were no outstanding issues (no complaints about NX/XD support). So while the download is scary, and initially you'd be worried about losing the contents of C:\ESD, in fact the tool is re-entrant, and you can go back and prepare other media formats. Like DVD (using build-in windows burner), ISO9660, or USB key (prepared the same way as the previous "Windows 7, microsoftstore" tool would do it). Paul |
#3
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Latest Windows Upgrade offer
Robin Bignall docrobin ntlworld.com wrote:
This is the latest Win 8 upgrade offer the only option is download and install. No DVD, and I can't see an option to download and save for installation later. My hardware won't do an upgrade install. I need the DVD to do a clean install if and when I want to get around to it. Bummer! That problem is not uncommon. Don't ask me why, but you have to download from a version of Windows with a built-in CD burner, post Windows XP, like Vista or 7 or 8, if you want a saved copy of the ISO. To get a copy of the 64-bit version, all you have to do is use a 64-bit version of Windows 7 to do the download, using (Windows8-Setup.exe) I think. |
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Latest Windows Upgrade offer
In ,
Paul typed: Robin Bignall wrote: This is the latest Win 8 upgrade offer in the UK. At 24.99 UKP it's a good price. http://www.microsoftstore.com/store/...0/pgm.81522200 To get to it I clicked on the $39.99 latest offer in the US http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows/buy and then selected "Or get the upgrade on DVD from the Microsoft Store". Notice it transferred to the UK store but the only option is download and install. No DVD, and I can't see an option to download and save for installation later. My hardware won't do an upgrade install. I need the DVD to do a clean install if and when I want to get around to it. Bummer! When I did the electronic purchase for $39.99, the files downloaded into C:\ESD on the purchasing machine (my laptop). Initially I was concerned about losing the files. I didn't know where they were, looked in %temp% and so on. Anyway, if you run the tool again, it presents the same options for post-usage of the C:\ESD folder. It will make an ISO9660 file for you. It can also load a USB flash key with the files. I used the USB key option, but also had it prepare the ISO9660 file for storage on this machine. My desktop machine is where I installed the resulting 64 bit download. The order machine runs a 64 bit OS, so the purchase would be for 64 bit download as well. Then, I transferred over to the desktop machine, to do the actual install (previously, the desktop used a 32 bit OS). And, as a precaution, I also ran the upgrade tool on this machine, to make sure there were no outstanding issues (no complaints about NX/XD support). So while the download is scary, and initially you'd be worried about losing the contents of C:\ESD, in fact the tool is re-entrant, and you can go back and prepare other media formats. Like DVD (using build-in windows burner), ISO9660, or USB key (prepared the same way as the previous "Windows 7, microsoftstore" tool would do it). Paul Did you find a way to avoid downloading Windows 8? I didn't see this option. When I purchased a Windows 8 Upgrade for one of my Dell Latitude ST machines, it started to download a copy. I didn't need it since I already have the retail boxed set of Windows 8 Pro Upgrade. So I paused the download. I didn't see anyway to unload it and get rid of the utility. I didn't spend a lot of time on this problem since I was going to do a clean install of Windows 8 anyway and thus everything on that drive just didn't matter. But I am going to probably upgrade some other computers here before January 31st. So I am going to have to figure something out to avoid this problem. Worse comes to worse, I could always restore from a backup. ;-) -- Bill Gateway M465e ('06 era) - OE-QuoteFix v1.19.2 Centrino Core2 Duo T5600 1.83GHz - 4GB - Windows XP SP2 |
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On Sat, 29 Dec 2012 02:16:07 -0600, "BillW50" wrote:
In , Paul typed: Robin Bignall wrote: This is the latest Win 8 upgrade offer in the UK. At 24.99 UKP it's a good price. http://www.microsoftstore.com/store/...0/pgm.81522200 To get to it I clicked on the $39.99 latest offer in the US http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows/buy and then selected "Or get the upgrade on DVD from the Microsoft Store". Notice it transferred to the UK store but the only option is download and install. No DVD, and I can't see an option to download and save for installation later. My hardware won't do an upgrade install. I need the DVD to do a clean install if and when I want to get around to it. Bummer! When I did the electronic purchase for $39.99, the files downloaded into C:\ESD on the purchasing machine (my laptop). Initially I was concerned about losing the files. I didn't know where they were, looked in %temp% and so on. Got it, Paul. Copied c:\esd to E: as a precaution. Anyway, if you run the tool again, it presents the same options for post-usage of the C:\ESD folder. It will make an ISO9660 file for you. It can also load a USB flash key with the files. I used the USB key option, but also had it prepare the ISO9660 file for storage on this machine. My desktop machine is where I installed the resulting 64 bit download. The order machine runs a 64 bit OS, so the purchase would be for 64 bit download as well. Then, I transferred over to the desktop machine, to do the actual install (previously, the desktop used a 32 bit OS). And, as a precaution, I also ran the upgrade tool on this machine, to make sure there were no outstanding issues (no complaints about NX/XD support). So while the download is scary, and initially you'd be worried about losing the contents of C:\ESD, in fact the tool is re-entrant, and you can go back and prepare other media formats. Like DVD (using build-in windows burner), ISO9660, or USB key (prepared the same way as the previous "Windows 7, microsoftstore" tool would do it). Paul Did you find a way to avoid downloading Windows 8? I didn't see this option. When I purchased a Windows 8 Upgrade for one of my Dell Latitude ST machines, it started to download a copy. I didn't need it since I already have the retail boxed set of Windows 8 Pro Upgrade. So I paused the download. I didn't see anyway to unload it and get rid of the utility. I didn't see a way of stopping the download, Bill, even though I ordered a backup DVD as well. -- Robin Bignall Herts, England |
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Latest Windows Upgrade offer
When you purchase the upgrade an email is sent to email adddress entered during the purchase process. It contains a link for you to
return and download the iso file to create an installation dvd. (Note: ensure your isp doesn't filter the email to your web server account's junk folder or your local email client doesn't filter to your local email client junk folder). The architecture of the pc o/s (32 or 64 bit) downloading the iso file determines which version of Win8 is received.(i.e. if you use a 32 bit o/s to download you'll get the 32 bit version of Win8...likewise use 64 bit o/s, you'll obtain 64 bit Win8) Upgrades are intended for upgrading 'on-top' of an existing o/s. While it is technically feasible to perform a clean install (install to a bare drive) with the upgrade iso...if your current o/s is XP or Vista the upgrade will perform (since no other route is possible from XP or Vista) a clean install. The real question, if you care to elaborate further: - Why won't your hardware do an upgrade install ? -- ....winston msft mvp consumer apps "Robin Bignall" wrote in message ... This is the latest Win 8 upgrade offer in the UK. At 24.99 UKP it's a good price. http://www.microsoftstore.com/store/...0/pgm.81522200 To get to it I clicked on the $39.99 latest offer in the US http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows/buy and then selected "Or get the upgrade on DVD from the Microsoft Store". Notice it transferred to the UK store but the only option is download and install. No DVD, and I can't see an option to download and save for installation later. My hardware won't do an upgrade install. I need the DVD to do a clean install if and when I want to get around to it. Bummer! -- Robin Bignall Herts, England |
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Latest Windows Upgrade offer
On Sat, 29 Dec 2012 12:23:54 -0700, "...winston"
wrote: The real question, if you care to elaborate further: - Why won't your hardware do an upgrade install ? I went through this way upthread, Winston. During the upgrade process the installer issues reboot requests. My hardware, for some reason, ignores them. So, what should have been done during the reboot does not get done and the install fails. Clean installs do not issue reboots. I have checked my motherboard to see if anyone else has reported this (Paul had a search too) and I can find nothing. This is a new, modern M/B -- Gigabyte GA-X79-UD3. (What you actually see during the install is the installer window saying something like "Press 'next' to reboot your system". You press, the window shuts and immediately reopens again. It expects that a reboot has been done, but it hasn't, so whatever should have happened during the reboot has not happened. The installer tries to continue but says it can't find the files it's looking for and exits. If you do a manual reboot at that 'next', the system does not pick up that an installer was supposed to be running. If you restart the installer it starts at the beginning again.) -- Robin Bignall Herts, England |
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On 12/29/2012 11:16 AM, Robin Bignall wrote:
On Sat, 29 Dec 2012 02:16:07 -0600, wrote: Did you find a way to avoid downloading Windows 8? I didn't see this option. When I purchased a Windows 8 Upgrade for one of my Dell Latitude ST machines, it started to download a copy. I didn't need it since I already have the retail boxed set of Windows 8 Pro Upgrade. So I paused the download. I didn't see anyway to unload it and get rid of the utility. I didn't see a way of stopping the download, Bill, even though I ordered a backup DVD as well. Thanks Robin. I think it is there somewhere. I am going to be ordering some more so I have to avoid this later. :-( -- Bill Gateway M465e ('06 era) - Thunderbird v12 Centrino Core2 Duo T7400 2.16 GHz - 4GB - Windows 8 |
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On 12/29/2012 1:23 PM, ...winston wrote:
When you purchase the upgrade an email is sent to email adddress entered during the purchase process. It contains a link for you to return and download the iso file to create an installation dvd. (Note: ensure your isp doesn't filter the email to your web server account's junk folder or your local email client doesn't filter to your local email client junk folder). Not in my case and apparently not for others. It wanted to force you to download Windows 8 whether you liked it or not. I could pause it, but that is about all the control I had. I restored from a recent backup, so all was fine. Although one shouldn't have to resort to such drastic measures. -- Bill Gateway M465e ('06 era) - Thunderbird v12 Centrino Core2 Duo T7400 2.16 GHz - 4GB - Windows 8 |
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BillW50 wrote:
On 12/29/2012 1:23 PM, ...winston wrote: When you purchase the upgrade an email is sent to email adddress entered during the purchase process. It contains a link for you to return and download the iso file to create an installation dvd. (Note: ensure your isp doesn't filter the email to your web server account's junk folder or your local email client doesn't filter to your local email client junk folder). Not in my case and apparently not for others. It wanted to force you to download Windows 8 whether you liked it or not. I could pause it, but that is about all the control I had. I restored from a recent backup, so all was fine. Although one shouldn't have to resort to such drastic measures. According to this (scroll to the end of step 14)... http://eightforums.com/tutorials/118...nload-run.html "14. This is the product key number (license) for your purchased Windows 8 upgrade. I would recommend that you click on the View Receipt link to Print or Save a copy of your "order summary" that includes your product key number for safe keeping. When finished, click on Next. (see screenshot below) If you have already downloaded an ISO file with the upgrade assistant for this same edition of Windows 8 you purchased now, and are just purchasing (up to 5) another product key number for it, then you can close the Windows 8 Upgrade Assistant now to avoid having to go through the download process (step 16 below) again. " So that's their advice. I would expect though, the Assistant is going to remember the download did not complete, so the tool won't be exactly "stateless" the next time it starts. Paul |
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On Sat, 29 Dec 2012 20:42:20 +0000, Robin Bignall wrote:
On Sat, 29 Dec 2012 12:23:54 -0700, "...winston" wrote: The real question, if you care to elaborate further: - Why won't your hardware do an upgrade install ? I went through this way upthread, Winston. During the upgrade process the installer issues reboot requests. My hardware, for some reason, ignores them. So, what should have been done during the reboot does not get done and the install fails. Clean installs do not issue reboots. I have checked my motherboard to see if anyone else has reported this (Paul had a search too) and I can find nothing. This is a new, modern M/B -- Gigabyte GA-X79-UD3. (What you actually see during the install is the installer window saying something like "Press 'next' to reboot your system". You press, the window shuts and immediately reopens again. It expects that a reboot has been done, but it hasn't, so whatever should have happened during the reboot has not happened. The installer tries to continue but says it can't find the files it's looking for and exits. If you do a manual reboot at that 'next', the system does not pick up that an installer was supposed to be running. If you restart the installer it starts at the beginning again.) Reading your scenario above, it looks to me like you made the same mistake I did a while back. The deal is that the second and subsequent boots are *not* from the DVD. When you are asked to press any key to reboot, *don't do it*. Let it boot from the partially completed installation on the hard drive. These days I cross my arms over my chest when the shutdown starts and keep them there until reboot happens. That keeps me out of trouble. -- Gene E. Bloch (Stumbling Bloch) |
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Latest Windows Upgrade offer
-- ....winston msft mvp "BillW50" wrote in message ... Not in my case and apparently not for others. It wanted to force you to download Windows 8 whether you liked it or not. I could pause it, but that is about all the control I had. I restored from a recent backup, so all was fine. No matter which route you take...an email will be sent to the email address of record used during the purchase process with the following information: qp This email will contain your order number, product key number, a link to download Windows 8 again, and a link to order a DVD. /qp |
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On Sat, 29 Dec 2012 17:28:16 -0800, "Gene E. Bloch"
wrote: On Sat, 29 Dec 2012 20:42:20 +0000, Robin Bignall wrote: On Sat, 29 Dec 2012 12:23:54 -0700, "...winston" wrote: The real question, if you care to elaborate further: - Why won't your hardware do an upgrade install ? I went through this way upthread, Winston. During the upgrade process the installer issues reboot requests. My hardware, for some reason, ignores them. So, what should have been done during the reboot does not get done and the install fails. Clean installs do not issue reboots. I have checked my motherboard to see if anyone else has reported this (Paul had a search too) and I can find nothing. This is a new, modern M/B -- Gigabyte GA-X79-UD3. (What you actually see during the install is the installer window saying something like "Press 'next' to reboot your system". You press, the window shuts and immediately reopens again. It expects that a reboot has been done, but it hasn't, so whatever should have happened during the reboot has not happened. The installer tries to continue but says it can't find the files it's looking for and exits. If you do a manual reboot at that 'next', the system does not pick up that an installer was supposed to be running. If you restart the installer it starts at the beginning again.) Reading your scenario above, it looks to me like you made the same mistake I did a while back. The deal is that the second and subsequent boots are *not* from the DVD. When you are asked to press any key to reboot, *don't do it*. Let it boot from the partially completed installation on the hard drive. Yes, I know that, but there is no partially-completed installation, Gene. And the Win8 installer does not say 'press any key to reboot'. It just issues a 'restart' command and shuts down, leaving itself pending, but the hardware ignores the command. The installer then restarts assuming the reboot has happened. Anyway, today I decided to try installing the Win8 that I bought and downloaded to the desk top yesterday. It started, and went to get updates. Then it told me that it would reboot when I pressed 'next'. When I did, the installer window closed. Needless to say, it didn't reboot, and the installer window opened again (assuming the reboot had been done) and showed me the licence. I accepted that and then it started installing..10%..30%..60%. I thought it was going to work. At 80% it said 'in a few moments your computer will reboot'. The few moments passed, then up came a grey, unassuming OK box that simply said 'Windows 8 has failed to install'. No error code. That was that. If I go to shutdown and select 'restart' the system will reboot. If some installation ends up with 'restart now' and 'restart later' boxes, and I choose the former, it reboots. But if a program such as an installer issues a 'restart' command internally, my hardware ignores it. That is the problem. -- Robin Bignall Herts, England |
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On Sun, 30 Dec 2012 19:02:34 +0000, Robin Bignall wrote:
On Sat, 29 Dec 2012 17:28:16 -0800, "Gene E. Bloch" wrote: On Sat, 29 Dec 2012 20:42:20 +0000, Robin Bignall wrote: On Sat, 29 Dec 2012 12:23:54 -0700, "...winston" wrote: The real question, if you care to elaborate further: - Why won't your hardware do an upgrade install ? I went through this way upthread, Winston. During the upgrade process the installer issues reboot requests. My hardware, for some reason, ignores them. So, what should have been done during the reboot does not get done and the install fails. Clean installs do not issue reboots. I have checked my motherboard to see if anyone else has reported this (Paul had a search too) and I can find nothing. This is a new, modern M/B -- Gigabyte GA-X79-UD3. (What you actually see during the install is the installer window saying something like "Press 'next' to reboot your system". You press, the window shuts and immediately reopens again. It expects that a reboot has been done, but it hasn't, so whatever should have happened during the reboot has not happened. The installer tries to continue but says it can't find the files it's looking for and exits. If you do a manual reboot at that 'next', the system does not pick up that an installer was supposed to be running. If you restart the installer it starts at the beginning again.) Reading your scenario above, it looks to me like you made the same mistake I did a while back. The deal is that the second and subsequent boots are *not* from the DVD. When you are asked to press any key to reboot, *don't do it*. Let it boot from the partially completed installation on the hard drive. Yes, I know that, but there is no partially-completed installation, Gene. And the Win8 installer does not say 'press any key to reboot'. It just issues a 'restart' command and shuts down, leaving itself pending, but the hardware ignores the command. The installer then restarts assuming the reboot has happened. Anyway, today I decided to try installing the Win8 that I bought and downloaded to the desk top yesterday. It started, and went to get updates. Then it told me that it would reboot when I pressed 'next'. When I did, the installer window closed. Needless to say, it didn't reboot, and the installer window opened again (assuming the reboot had been done) and showed me the licence. I accepted that and then it started installing..10%..30%..60%. I thought it was going to work. At 80% it said 'in a few moments your computer will reboot'. The few moments passed, then up came a grey, unassuming OK box that simply said 'Windows 8 has failed to install'. No error code. That was that. If I go to shutdown and select 'restart' the system will reboot. If some installation ends up with 'restart now' and 'restart later' boxes, and I choose the former, it reboots. But if a program such as an installer issues a 'restart' command internally, my hardware ignores it. That is the problem. Sorry that my guess wasn't correct. I read your statements as a bit ambiguous, and on the off-chance that one of my interpretations was correct, it seemed to be worth posting my idea. I wish it had helped... As you might guess, I therefore have no useful ideas. Your problem seems bizarre enough. Even the idea of BIOS settings doesn't make sense (to me, anyway), since shutdown as a command doesn't mean sleep or whatever... Additionally, I don't think I understand that if the computer hasn't rebooted, it manages to run the installer again. Does that mean it doesn't even shut down? You said "It just issues a 'restart' command and shuts down"; I thought that meant the computer, but now I am guessing that it means the program. -- Gene E. Bloch (Stumbling Bloch) |
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On Sun, 30 Dec 2012 15:04:02 -0800, "Gene E. Bloch"
wrote: On Sun, 30 Dec 2012 19:02:34 +0000, Robin Bignall wrote: On Sat, 29 Dec 2012 17:28:16 -0800, "Gene E. Bloch" wrote: On Sat, 29 Dec 2012 20:42:20 +0000, Robin Bignall wrote: On Sat, 29 Dec 2012 12:23:54 -0700, "...winston" wrote: The real question, if you care to elaborate further: - Why won't your hardware do an upgrade install ? I went through this way upthread, Winston. During the upgrade process the installer issues reboot requests. My hardware, for some reason, ignores them. So, what should have been done during the reboot does not get done and the install fails. Clean installs do not issue reboots. I have checked my motherboard to see if anyone else has reported this (Paul had a search too) and I can find nothing. This is a new, modern M/B -- Gigabyte GA-X79-UD3. (What you actually see during the install is the installer window saying something like "Press 'next' to reboot your system". You press, the window shuts and immediately reopens again. It expects that a reboot has been done, but it hasn't, so whatever should have happened during the reboot has not happened. The installer tries to continue but says it can't find the files it's looking for and exits. If you do a manual reboot at that 'next', the system does not pick up that an installer was supposed to be running. If you restart the installer it starts at the beginning again.) Reading your scenario above, it looks to me like you made the same mistake I did a while back. The deal is that the second and subsequent boots are *not* from the DVD. When you are asked to press any key to reboot, *don't do it*. Let it boot from the partially completed installation on the hard drive. Yes, I know that, but there is no partially-completed installation, Gene. And the Win8 installer does not say 'press any key to reboot'. It just issues a 'restart' command and shuts down, leaving itself pending, but the hardware ignores the command. The installer then restarts assuming the reboot has happened. Anyway, today I decided to try installing the Win8 that I bought and downloaded to the desk top yesterday. It started, and went to get updates. Then it told me that it would reboot when I pressed 'next'. When I did, the installer window closed. Needless to say, it didn't reboot, and the installer window opened again (assuming the reboot had been done) and showed me the licence. I accepted that and then it started installing..10%..30%..60%. I thought it was going to work. At 80% it said 'in a few moments your computer will reboot'. The few moments passed, then up came a grey, unassuming OK box that simply said 'Windows 8 has failed to install'. No error code. That was that. If I go to shutdown and select 'restart' the system will reboot. If some installation ends up with 'restart now' and 'restart later' boxes, and I choose the former, it reboots. But if a program such as an installer issues a 'restart' command internally, my hardware ignores it. That is the problem. Sorry that my guess wasn't correct. I read your statements as a bit ambiguous, and on the off-chance that one of my interpretations was correct, it seemed to be worth posting my idea. I wish it had helped... As you might guess, I therefore have no useful ideas. Your problem seems bizarre enough. Even the idea of BIOS settings doesn't make sense (to me, anyway), since shutdown as a command doesn't mean sleep or whatever... Additionally, I don't think I understand that if the computer hasn't rebooted, it manages to run the installer again. Does that mean it doesn't even shut down? You said "It just issues a 'restart' command and shuts down"; I thought that meant the computer, but now I am guessing that it means the program. Yes, the installer program. It closes the installer window, calls for a reboot from the system, and then immediately reopens the window again and carries on, not knowing that the reboot hasn't happened. But because it hasn't happened, whatever should have been done during the reboot, but which hasn't been done, causes the install to eventually fail. It happens almost immediately if I try to install from DVD. The installer fails at the very next step after getting updates, because it can't find the licence on C: that it's installing to. Thus, one of the things that must happen on the reboot is the copying of the licence from DVD to C:. When installing from desktop, the licence is already on C:, so it finds it and breaks down at a later, failing reboot at 80% done. I hope that's fairly clear. Why it's happening on my hardware, I haven't a clue. Nobody else has found it or brought it up as far as I can tell. There's nothing in BIOS, and it's maddening: it means that to get W8 I shall have to do a clean install. That's a lot of work; more than 60 programs to reinstall. -- Robin Bignall Herts, England |
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