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home to pro?



 
 
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  #1  
Old December 6th 17, 10:17 AM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
T
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,600
Default home to pro?

Hi All,

Anyone know if there is a Home to Professional upgrade
license out there?


Many thanks,
-T
Ads
  #2  
Old December 6th 17, 10:23 AM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
Andy Burns[_6_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,318
Default home to pro?

T wrote:

Anyone know if there is a Home to Professional upgrade
license out there?


StartSettingsSystemAboutChangeProductKeyOrUpgr adeGoToStore
  #3  
Old December 6th 17, 10:50 AM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
T
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,600
Default home to pro?

On 12/06/2017 01:23 AM, Andy Burns wrote:
T wrote:

Anyone know if there is a Home to Professional upgrade
license out there?


StartSettingsSystemAboutChangeProductKeyOrUpgr adeGoToStore



Thank you!

I am hoping my distributors have something I can sell.
I am not real trusting having my customer give M$
their credit card numbers.
  #4  
Old December 6th 17, 02:16 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
Doomsdrzej[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 262
Default home to pro?

On Wed, 6 Dec 2017 01:17:01 -0800, T wrote:

Hi All,

Anyone know if there is a Home to Professional upgrade
license out there?


Many thanks,
-T


You can upgrade directly within the System Settings - System - About.
As far as I know, it's still about $200. Its biggest feature is the
fact that it allows you to encrypt your hard disk but depending on who
you believe, this encryption already has backdoors and is therefore
utterly worthless. Besides, you can install Veracrypt which will do
the same thing for nothing.
  #5  
Old December 6th 17, 02:29 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
Paul[_32_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 11,873
Default home to pro?

T wrote:
On 12/06/2017 01:23 AM, Andy Burns wrote:
T wrote:

Anyone know if there is a Home to Professional upgrade
license out there?


StartSettingsSystemAboutChangeProductKeyOrUpgr adeGoToStore



Thank you!

I am hoping my distributors have something I can sell.
I am not real trusting having my customer give M$
their credit card numbers.


The future is electronic, that's for sure.

Lots of keys stored in accounts and such.

Very little in the way of physical materials. I'm kinda
shocked to see a "COA" in this article, in a picture.
I thought COA stickers were gone for good.

https://www.groovypost.com/howto/fin...0-product-key/

Paul
  #6  
Old December 6th 17, 05:04 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
Doomsdrzej[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 262
Default home to pro?

On Wed, 6 Dec 2017 09:13:21 -0500, Wolf K
wrote:

On 2017-12-06 08:16, Doomsdrzej wrote:
On Wed, 6 Dec 2017 01:17:01 -0800, T wrote:

Hi All,

Anyone know if there is a Home to Professional upgrade
license out there?


Many thanks,
-T


You can upgrade directly within the System Settings - System - About.
As far as I know, it's still about $200. Its biggest feature is the
fact that it allows you to encrypt your hard disk but depending on who
you believe, this encryption already has backdoors and is therefore
utterly worthless. Besides, you can install Veracrypt which will do
the same thing for nothing.


Besides, the UK wants to make those backdoors (and key surrender)
mandatory, so that had hats can't hide from the police and the spy catchers.

Ramp up your paranoia, people!


Had the country not decided that bringing in millions of life-long
welfare recipients who are simultaneously terrorists was somehow a
benefit to the nation, they wouldn't feel the need to surveil eveyone.
  #7  
Old December 6th 17, 05:34 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
Mr. Man-wai Chang
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,941
Default home to pro?

On 12/6/2017 5:17 PM, T wrote:
Hi All,

Anyone know if there is a Home to Professional upgrade
license out there?


You are supposed to buy the Win 10 Pro Upgrade Edition, no discount I
believe. Call or email Micro$oft to confirm.

--
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/ v \ Simplicity is Beauty!
/( _ )\ May the Force and farces be with you!
^ ^ (x86_64 Ubuntu 9.10) Linux 2.6.39.3
不借貸! 不詐騙! 不援交! 不打交! 不打劫! 不自殺! 請考慮綜援 (CSSA):
http://www.swd.gov.hk/tc/index/site_...sub_addressesa
  #8  
Old December 6th 17, 09:51 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
Doomsdrzej[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 262
Default home to pro?

On Wed, 6 Dec 2017 11:44:13 -0500, Wolf K
wrote:

On 2017-12-06 11:04, Doomsdrzej wrote:
Had the country not decided that bringing in millions of life-long
welfare recipients who are simultaneously terrorists was somehow a
benefit to the nation, they wouldn't feel the need to surveil eveyone.


http://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/12/05/liberty_ipa/


In other words, you're confirming that what I said is correct. Thank
you, liberal idiot.
  #9  
Old December 6th 17, 09:53 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
VanguardLH[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 10,881
Default home to pro?

Doomsdrzej wrote:

T wrote:

Anyone know if there is a Home to Professional upgrade license out
there?


You can upgrade directly within the System Settings - System - About.
As far as I know, it's still about $200. Its biggest feature is the
fact that it allows you to encrypt your hard disk but depending on
who you believe, this encryption already has backdoors and is
therefore utterly worthless. Besides, you can install Veracrypt which
will do the same thing for nothing.


Biggest? Depends on what the user/admin is looking for. You describe a
feature. Presumably you are talking about Bitlocker which itself is is
as secure as Veracrypt (a variant of TrueCrypt). The software got
patched LONG AGO. It is the hardware (TPM chips) that had a
vulnerability but that also got fixed. Please keep current on your FUD.

o http://www.securityweek.com/research...tlocker-bypass
"bypassed on systems that do not have the latest patches". Gee, what
might be the solution there and the same as with every other security
update? Duh! The article is dated November 18, 2015 (TWO YEARS AGO)
but the patch had already showed up on Nov 2015 Patch Tuesday.
o https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/...ability-in-tpm
https://community.sophos.com/kb/en-us/127650
What's the solution? Yeah, update the firmware. Duh!

If you are using Bitlocker then you should be keeping up with the news.
After all, either you are a sysadmin in a company or you choose to be an
admin of your own PC so you're the one supposed to be knowledgeable.
Doubtful that anyone looking at going from Home to Pro really cares
about Bitlocker if they weren't using it before or already employed an
alternative. Bitlocker can incorporate hardware, Veracrypt cannot.

Home editions cannot join a domain. A SOHO might decide they want to go
with a domain, add a server, and then want their workstations added to
the domain. Can do that with Pro, not with Home. Also, no group/local
policy editor in Home editions. You might figure out which registry
entries match which policies but that only works on simple policies.
Some policies (e.g., Software Restriction Policies) generate a unique
hash when they are created and you won't be able to do that with the
registry editor. There are templates you can add to the policy store
for a myriad of settings and control, often regarding specific software.
Yeah, try adding those with regedit.

Items in Pro that are missing in Home edition:
- Windows Information Protection (http://tinyurl.com/ya3vnxoc)
- Bitlocker (you mentioned but not by name, alternatives available).
- Group policy (noted above).
- Assigned Access (http://tinyurl.com/yaobzk6e)
- Dynamic Provisioning (http://tinyurl.com/y9gd2pzk)
- Shared PC Configuration (http://tinyurl.com/yak2hmt3)
- Join a domain (not possible with Home editions without hacking)
- Remote Desktop (alternatives available, T already knows some)
- Client Hyper-V (other virtualization available but may not be
compatible with Hyper-V deployed elsewhere in the organization).
- and more.

T never stated if this was for a standalone PC or used in a business and
why they (not T) feels the need to go to the Pro edition. From T's past
descriptions of his customers, they're boobs so the Pro version will
offer them no advantage, be beyond their abilities to administer, and
just waste money.
  #10  
Old December 6th 17, 10:21 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
Doomsdrzej[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 262
Default home to pro?

On Wed, 6 Dec 2017 14:53:38 -0600, VanguardLH wrote:

Doomsdrzej wrote:

T wrote:

Anyone know if there is a Home to Professional upgrade license out
there?


You can upgrade directly within the System Settings - System - About.
As far as I know, it's still about $200. Its biggest feature is the
fact that it allows you to encrypt your hard disk but depending on
who you believe, this encryption already has backdoors and is
therefore utterly worthless. Besides, you can install Veracrypt which
will do the same thing for nothing.


Biggest? Depends on what the user/admin is looking for. You describe a
feature. Presumably you are talking about Bitlocker which itself is is
as secure as Veracrypt (a variant of TrueCrypt). The software got
patched LONG AGO. It is the hardware (TPM chips) that had a
vulnerability but that also got fixed. Please keep current on your FUD.

o http://www.securityweek.com/research...tlocker-bypass
"bypassed on systems that do not have the latest patches". Gee, what
might be the solution there and the same as with every other security
update? Duh! The article is dated November 18, 2015 (TWO YEARS AGO)
but the patch had already showed up on Nov 2015 Patch Tuesday.
o https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/...ability-in-tpm
https://community.sophos.com/kb/en-us/127650
What's the solution? Yeah, update the firmware. Duh!

If you are using Bitlocker then you should be keeping up with the news.
After all, either you are a sysadmin in a company or you choose to be an
admin of your own PC so you're the one supposed to be knowledgeable.


When the Hell did I say I was a sys admin? Also, why would I believe
that Bitlocker doesn't have backdoors just because some article said
so? I'm referring to the fact that Windows in general seems to have
backdoors for law enforcement as per Snowden's revelations. Security
Week can do nothing to change the very negative perception people have
of Microsoft's products as it relates to privacy and personal
security.

Doubtful that anyone looking at going from Home to Pro really cares
about Bitlocker if they weren't using it before or already employed an
alternative. Bitlocker can incorporate hardware, Veracrypt cannot.


Except that VeraCrypt, in its open-source nature, guarantees that it
is devoid of backdoors whereas BitLocker can make no such promise by
being a proprietary product.

Home editions cannot join a domain. A SOHO might decide they want to go
with a domain, add a server, and then want their workstations added to
the domain. Can do that with Pro, not with Home. Also, no group/local
policy editor in Home editions. You might figure out which registry
entries match which policies but that only works on simple policies.
Some policies (e.g., Software Restriction Policies) generate a unique
hash when they are created and you won't be able to do that with the
registry editor. There are templates you can add to the policy store
for a myriad of settings and control, often regarding specific software.
Yeah, try adding those with regedit.

Items in Pro that are missing in Home edition:
- Windows Information Protection (http://tinyurl.com/ya3vnxoc)
- Bitlocker (you mentioned but not by name, alternatives available).
- Group policy (noted above).
- Assigned Access (http://tinyurl.com/yaobzk6e)
- Dynamic Provisioning (http://tinyurl.com/y9gd2pzk)
- Shared PC Configuration (http://tinyurl.com/yak2hmt3)
- Join a domain (not possible with Home editions without hacking)
- Remote Desktop (alternatives available, T already knows some)
- Client Hyper-V (other virtualization available but may not be
compatible with Hyper-V deployed elsewhere in the organization).
- and more.

T never stated if this was for a standalone PC or used in a business and
why they (not T) feels the need to go to the Pro edition. From T's past
descriptions of his customers, they're boobs so the Pro version will
offer them no advantage, be beyond their abilities to administer, and
just waste money.


The way he expressed himself in his post, it was pretty clear that he
was a single user wondering whether he would simply be better off with
Pro over Home. As such, for a person matching his profile, BitLocker
is the feature most likely to pique his interest. THAT is why I
highlighted IT and not the others.
  #11  
Old December 6th 17, 10:46 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
VanguardLH[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 10,881
Default home to pro?

Doomsdrzej wrote:

Except that VeraCrypt, in its open-source nature, guarantees that it
is devoid of backdoors whereas BitLocker can make no such promise by
being a proprietary product.


Being open sourced doesn't guarantee no malicious intent. Unless the
code is audited, no one knows the safety of an open source program.
Veracrypt WAS vulnerable despite being an open source program. Because
it was open source meant someone else could review the code. Some
vulnerabilities were cound in Veracrypt. See:

https://ostif.org/the-veracrypt-audit-results/
QuarksLab found:
8 Critical Vulnerabilities
3 Medium Vulnerabilities
15 Low or Informational Vulnerabilities / Concerns
Looks like 7 of the 26 issues were addressed by Veracrypt. Unsure how
many more got addressed by "for other vulnerabilities that can be closed
by user practices". Compression got addressed by replacing with
different libs but those libs were not part of the code audit.

Being proprietary doesn't mean a program is less secure than an open
sourced counterpart. The audit found problems in Veracrypt. So how
many open sourced programs actually get audited? Has there been a code
audit of LibreOffice? Gimp? Auditing the source code does not mandate
that was the code used when compiling a distributed executable. Rare
few users compile the source code. Instead they pick up the exectuable.
Show 'em this. Deliver 'em that. Ever seen a code audit that
disassembles Veracrypt to audit that code?

Open source isn't safer. It's just *available* for public review, not
that it ever got independently reviewed. You have to assume the source
that is open for public review was also the source used to compile the
distributed executable.
  #12  
Old December 6th 17, 11:02 PM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
Doomsdrzej[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 262
Default home to pro?

On Wed, 6 Dec 2017 15:46:57 -0600, VanguardLH wrote:

Doomsdrzej wrote:

Except that VeraCrypt, in its open-source nature, guarantees that it
is devoid of backdoors whereas BitLocker can make no such promise by
being a proprietary product.


Being open sourced doesn't guarantee no malicious intent. Unless the
code is audited, no one knows the safety of an open source program.
Veracrypt WAS vulnerable despite being an open source program. Because
it was open source meant someone else could review the code. Some
vulnerabilities were cound in Veracrypt. See:

https://ostif.org/the-veracrypt-audit-results/
QuarksLab found:
8 Critical Vulnerabilities
3 Medium Vulnerabilities
15 Low or Informational Vulnerabilities / Concerns
Looks like 7 of the 26 issues were addressed by Veracrypt. Unsure how
many more got addressed by "for other vulnerabilities that can be closed
by user practices". Compression got addressed by replacing with
different libs but those libs were not part of the code audit.

Being proprietary doesn't mean a program is less secure than an open
sourced counterpart. The audit found problems in Veracrypt. So how
many open sourced programs actually get audited? Has there been a code
audit of LibreOffice? Gimp? Auditing the source code does not mandate
that was the code used when compiling a distributed executable. Rare
few users compile the source code. Instead they pick up the exectuable.
Show 'em this. Deliver 'em that. Ever seen a code audit that
disassembles Veracrypt to audit that code?

Open source isn't safer. It's just *available* for public review, not
that it ever got independently reviewed. You have to assume the source
that is open for public review was also the source used to compile the
distributed executable.


Great points and thank you for that.
  #13  
Old December 7th 17, 01:42 AM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
....W¡ñ§±¤ñ
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8
Default home to pro?

T wrote:
On 12/06/2017 01:23 AM, Andy Burns wrote:
T wrote:

Anyone know if there is a Home to Professional upgrade
license out there?


StartSettingsSystemAboutChangeProductKeyOrUpgr adeGoToStore



Thank you!

I am hoping my distributors have something I can sell.


Upgrade 'ware' for Office and Windows ceased years ago. All versions
released are full versions and priced accordingly.

Also note...the Product key included in retail or onliner packaged or
downloaded product is only used to obtain the product not the product
key used for installation and subsequent activation.

Ttbomk, all current available versions are 'Click-to-Run' unlike prior
versions which were MSI(Desktop). Iirc, this change was made shortly
after Office 2K16 was released.

Optionally, Office 365 is available as a subscription based model,
though it does not meet your intent to 'sell it' since the subscription
is MSA account based.


--
....w¡ñ§±¤ñ
msft mvp 2007-2016, insider mvp 2016-2018



--
.....w¡ñ§±¤ñ
msft mvp 2007-2016, insider mvp 2016-2018
  #14  
Old December 7th 17, 02:00 AM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
....W¡ñ§±¤ñ
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8
Default home to pro?

T wrote:

T wrote:

Anyone know if there is a Home to Professional upgrade
license out there?


I am hoping my distributors have something I can sell.
I am not real trusting having my customer give M$
their credit card numbers.


Upgrade 'ware' for Office and Windows ceased years ago. All versions
released are full versions and priced accordingly.

Windows 8.0 was the last 'upgrade' Windows version with upgrade pricing.
Windows 8.1 and later is all full version/full price ware.
- Full version can be used to upgrade an existing device.

Office 2010 was the last upgrade 'Office' version with upgrade pricing.
- Note: For a short period of time upgrade pricing was available(circa
2012) for Office 2010 to 2013 with qualification tied to the point in
time Office 2010 was purchased(i.e. it was a guarantee to upgrade to
2013 if 2010 was purchased within a short period of time prior to 2013
release).
- Full can be used to upgrade 2013, but not 2010 or earlier. Those
earlier versions must be uninstalled.

--
.....w¡ñ§±¤ñ
msft mvp 2007-2016, insider mvp 2016-2018
  #15  
Old December 7th 17, 05:51 AM posted to alt.comp.os.windows-10
VanguardLH[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 10,881
Default O.T. winston - not the decoded nym in your From header (was: home to pro?)

.....w񧱤 wrote:
VVVVVVVVVVV Incorrect UTF8 Base64 corrected to his all-ASCII nym is:
....winston

From: =?UTF-8?B?Li4uLnfCocOxwqfCscKkw7E=?=


Seamonkey is screwing up your nym in the From header even worse than
whatever you were using before. The decoding of your UTF-8 Base64 nym
shows the original string had non-ASCII characters. Why do you need
UTF8 B64 encoding when "...winston" consists of ten ASCII characters?

"...winston" (sans quotes) in UTF-8 Base64 is encoded as:
=?UTF-8?B?Li4ud2luc3Rvbg==?=
not as
=?UTF-8?B?Li4uLnfCocOxwqfCscKkw7E=?=

Test it out at http://www.sendblaster.com/en/utf8-e...ubject-encoder.
Enter "...winston" to see what the UTF-8 Base64 string should be. As
another test, go to http://dogmamix.com/MimeHeadersDecoder/ and enter
what Seamonkey put in your From header, which was:

From: =?UTF-8?B?Li4uLnfCocOxwqfCscKkw7E=?=

and click the Decode button. Instead of "...winston" as your nym, it
decodes to "....w񧱤" (with 4 leading dots instead of 3).
 




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