Recommended Posts

The press releases and the talks about the Windows 10 free upgrade were a little vague on what exactly that entails.

 

1. What exactly does "for the life of the device" mean?

 

2. What happens to activation if i somehow i have to reinstall the OS? (happens less and less to me, but is still an issue for some people)

 

3. Can one use the upgrade only once from within the previous Windows install or will they be given a Windows 10 license key to replace the old one?

 

4. If the device is EOL can't we install on another machine? If not, will the previous license (say windows 7) be blacklisted form being used after the device that was upgraded o windows 10 is defunct and the 10 license is unusable? (At this point this is only a theory butMs did say for the life of the device)

 

I do have a fair number of Windows 7 licenses and i really don't want to have any of them be unusuable after i decide to upgrade and am not happy with what the license is restricting me to do. I honestly would have wished for it to be a free upgrade for Vista in the first week or two just to test out if/what the upgrade restrictions are if any.

 

Do not compare it to the Windows 8 25$ upgrade because that was permanent and reusable upgrade, and aparently there were no device restrictions. Citations are not really necessary, but neither are wild theories. Please do not come here to say that i am free not to upgrade to 10 or that upgrades will be cheap after that. That may be almost definitely true, but is not what i'm asking at the moment. I will probably mark as spam posts that are not at least slightly topical to these questions.

The reason there is still confusion is Microsoft themselves aren't exactly clarifying the issue.

 

Their Partner Support still seems to be under the impression it's only free for the first year then you'll have to pay for it, according to http://techreport.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=102035

 

As far as I can tell that's a load of crap, but I am not Microsoft and don't know why they wouldn't just come out and say that if that was how it's going to be.

What does, for the life of the device mean?

I'll try my best to answer all of your questions. 1-20: IT'S FREE!

It's not free if i have to give up a key for Windows 7 that i bought for a 10 key that can only be used on one device ever and may not be usable after the device is defunct/need reactivation because of too many hw changes.

I just want clarification that the Win 10 key is reusable in perpetuity (until activation servers are shut down) and i an use it on as many machines as i want (as long as i remove it from the old machine and activate it on the new one).

That is absolutely not clear at all at this moment.

Probably that the free license only applies for one device and can't be transferred.

Even if the old key is retail? Ok so if the key is not transferable, and i scrap the machine that has win10, will the 7 key still be usable/able to be reactivated? If not, than exchanging a "unlimited" instalation license for one that is only good for one machine, is not a great deal, at all.

I doubt anything at all will happen to your original OS license.

Probably but it's not clear, is it? I don't mind giving up a 7 license for a free 10 one, or even if i did pay a delta. But giving up a license that has (security) support until 2020 for one that has support only until the machine gets scrapped is the worst deal ever.

 

I honestly don't want to be a downer, but Microsoft should clarify the issue. You should give up your transferable license for a transferable one. If not, they should come out and say it. If the Win10 license is severly limited in activations compared to the ones for Win7 i have i still probably will upgrade at least one machine, but i really would like to know the details.

 

This will be flushed out when the OS actually gets released, and people will test, praise or bash the new license, but we should probably have an idea how it works beforehand.

Why would it be any different to previous Windows upgrades? :s

Because, at least at the moment, it seems one exchanges a retail license for one that seems to behave a lot like an OEM one.

Probably but it's not clear, is it? I don't mind giving up a 7 license for a free 10 one, or even if i did pay a delta. But giving up a license that has (security) support until 2020 for one that has support only until the machine gets scrapped is the worst deal ever.

 

I honestly don't want to be a downer, but Microsoft should clarify the issue. You should give up your transferable license for a transferable one. If not, they should come out and say it. If the Win10 license is severly limited in activations compared to the ones for Win7 i have i still probably will upgrade at least one machine, but i really would like to know the details.

 

This will be flushed out when the OS actually gets released, and people will test, praise or bash the new license, but we should probably have an idea how it works beforehand.

 

Honestly how do you get the idea that you will need to "give up a licence".

 

Nothing will be given up. How else do you expect all the Windows 7 laptop users to upgrade?

 

They all run on the same Windows 7 OEM keys.

The way I read it is when Windows 10 is first released it will be a free upgrade for selected operating systems for the first year only. The reason for this is as I believe, quicker uptake by the masses and to make it more appealing to people. They will also give the option for a fresh install.

 

The above will probably be based on your current licence and will somehow be registered to it to generate your new windows 10 licence so lets say for example, you need to wipe and start from scratch a few years down the line - you wont have to pay to reinstall windows 10 even if you originally got it for free because you originally took the offer within the first year. 

 

In regards to your current licence on whatever OS you are on, this wont be affected by the upgrade and you will see be able to downgrade and keep the current licence.

 

The only thing I don't know is how Microsoft will check the licences for upgrades. Maybe the licence from 8.1 or something will be the licence for windows 10? Or maybe the licence you have for 8.1 will generate a licence for windows 10 that you will need to save externally and anytime you need to reinstall you use this.

 

Either way, its free and your current licence wont be affected

The above will probably be based on your current licence and will somehow be registered to it to generate your new windows 10 licence so lets say for example, you need to wipe and start from scratch a few years down the line - you wont have to pay to reinstall windows 10 even if you originally got it for free because you originally took the offer within the first year.

That's absolutely not what i asked. Currently i have one Windows 7 license (actually i have more than one but that's not the point) and i can put that on any machine as long as i remove it from the old one and reactivate by phone. That's how any retail license should actright?

If i upgrade to Windows 10 support will be given for the life of the device? What does that mean? Can't i move my Win10 license from one machine to another the same i did with Win7, if my machine breaks down or i buy a new one? That should be the way it works, but are we sure that's what's gonna happen? Or is Microsoft gonna tie that Win10 license to that machine forever?

 

Honestly how do you get the idea that you will need to "give up a licence".

Nothing will be given up. How else do you expect all the Windows 7 laptop users to upgrade?

They all run on the same Windows 7 OEM keys.

Do you know how a retail license works or have you never used anything that didn't come preinstalled with an OS? What i was asking is that the Win10 license generated from the Win7 one i already have will be as reusable on other machines as the Win 7 one? Or will it be forever tied to the machine i did the updgrade on even though the original Win7 license i could move to any machine i wanted.

In regards to your current licence on whatever OS you are on, this wont be affected by the upgrade and you will see be able to downgrade and keep the current licence.

The only thing I don't know is how Microsoft will check the licences for upgrades. Maybe the licence from 8.1 or something will be the licence for windows 10? Or maybe the licence you have for 8.1 will generate a licence for windows 10 that you will need to save externally and anytime you need to reinstall you use this.

Either way, its free and your current licence wont be affected

How can i be sure of that, and where does MS state anything like that that is not for Enterprise customers.

That's absolutely not what i asked. Currently i have one Windows 7 license (actually i have more than one but that's not the point) and i can put that on any machine as long as i remove it from the old one and reactivate by phone. That's how any retail license should actright?

If i upgrade to Windows 10 support will be given for the life of the device? What does that mean? Can't i move my Win10 license from one machine to another the same i did with Win7, if my machine breaks down or i buy a new one? That should be the way it works, but are we sure that's what's gonna happen? Or is Microsoft gonna tie that Win10 license to that machine forever?

 

I think it will work like it has in the past with OEM versions.  If you needed to replace your motherboard or upgrade some components, you can just call them up and re-activate.

Can't i move my Win10 license from one machine to another the same i did with Win7, if my machine breaks down or i buy a new one? 

 

Technically you aren't able to do that now with Windows 7, the license is tied to the original machine you installed it on. Just because you can activate it doesn't make it legit.

 

Anyway the main question I have is. What if I install Windows 10 on my system on the 360th day of the freebie, and my OS gets corrupted and I need to do a clean load on the 366th day. Am I totally out of luck? Or will MS provide a ISO download and key that will work past the 365 days of the freebie?

Technically you aren't able to do that now with Windows 7, the license is tied to the original machine you installed it on. Just because you can activate it doesn't make it legit.

What makes ou say that? I have moved at least one Win7 RETAIL license on at least 5 different machines since i bought it. Begining with the second reinstall/move i had to do it by phone and the automated activation system asked me if i use (present tense, not used) that license on more than one machine (not a previous machine) and i got it activated afterwards. Of course i format the old machine/partition where the license was previously on.

Man, it seems that nobody in this thread has ever installed/reinstalled/moved a retail copy of Windows.

 

People don't seem to get that all my licenses are retail and can be moved from machine to machine, while respecting the terms of the license by having one license on only one machine, at any given time. But will upgrading one of those retail win7 licenses tie the resulting win10 license to the machine it was use on forever without me being able to use it on another one?

 

What i am asking is that if i have a RETAIL Win7 license, will the free Win10 license act pretty much as an OEM one, by being tied to one machine only, ever? Even though my original license was RETAIL?

  • Like 1

What makes ou say that? I have moved at least one Win7 RETAIL license on at least 5 different machines since i bought it. Begining with the second reinstall/move i had to do it by phone and the automated activation system asked me if i use (present tense, not used) that license on more than one machine (not a previous machine) and i got it activated afterwards. Of course i format the old machine/partition where the license was previously on.

Man, it seems that nobody in this thread has ever installed/reinstalled/moved a retail copy of Windows.

 

People don't seem to get that all my licenses are retail and can be moved from machine to machine, while respecting the terms of the license by having one license on only one machine, at any given time. But will upgrading one of those retail win7 licenses tie the resulting win10 license to the machine it was use on forever without me being able to use it on another one?

 

What i am asking is that if i have a RETAIL Win7 license, will the free Win10 license act pretty much as an OEM one, by being tied to one machine only, ever? Even though my original license was RETAIL?

 

We all understand what you are asking, but all we can do is speculate, MS is the only one at the moment who knows how this will work.

If you don't want us to speculate, don't ask questions nobody knows the answer too at the moment!

  • Like 3

We all understand what you are asking, but all we can do is speculate, MS is the only one at the moment who knows how this will work.

If you don't want us to speculate, don't ask questions nobody knows the answer too at the moment!

You and one other understand. Other people seem to be answering that yes OEM win7 keys are upgrade-able, which is not what i asked. Or that the Win10 license is valid after the free upgrade year, which is true, but again, not what i asked. Some people seem to think that one can't move retail licenses, which is bogus, but not what i asked.

 

I don't mind people speculating, but answering different questions alltogether?

 

What experience have people had with upgradind a RETAIL Win7 license to Win8? Is the Win8 license, that was bought as a 25$ upgrade using the Windows 8 Upgrade Assistant software just as moveable to another machine as the 7 one was or was it tied forever to the machine it was bought on?

Technically you aren't able to do that now with Windows 7, the license is tied to the original machine you installed it on. Just because you can activate it doesn't make it legit.

 

Anyway the main question I have is. What if I install Windows 10 on my system on the 360th day of the freebie, and my OS gets corrupted and I need to do a clean load on the 366th day. Am I totally out of luck? Or will MS provide a ISO download and key that will work past the 365 days of the freebie?

Partially untrue mate ;)

 

Retail Windows 7 SKUs (Win 7 home prem, professional & ultimate) can be transferred legally up to 3 different machines (only live/Activated on one though) in the keys lifetime, before triggering a manual re-activation.  ;)

 

OEMS however die with the machine as you have stated, Retails do not.

 

this is also why retail boxed copies of windows costs more than OEM ;)

Manual reactivation, after the old install has been scrapped, of course, does not make a retail license illicit.

Manual reactivation, after the old install has been scrapped, of course, does not make a retail license illicit.

huh Illicit?

 

You are legally allowed to move Retail COA/licences to a new PC (3 times it states), it tells you this in the Terms and conditions supplied in the retail box (on COA card iirc) at work atm so a VL customer, but ill check my retail boxes when I get home for you.

 

Apologies if I sound a douche, but ill take what MS tell me professionally and privately as a customer thanks ;) they know what I am legally allowed to do with their product.

 

If you have ever tried to find this out from MS you know how tricky it can be, best I can do for now is from TechNet forums (we can trust a MS MVP right?)

http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_7-windows_install/how-many-times-can-i-transfer-my-license-from-one/4f60cc24-2533-4986-a327-8aaeffbaacde

 

Andre Da Costa replied on October 6, 2012icon_down.png?ver=5.4.0.9

  • icon_closeicon.png?ver=5.4.0.9

If its a retail license, you can transfer it as many times as you like as long as it is removed from the previous computer it was installed on.

If it came preinstalled on your computer, it is tied to the first computer it is instaleld on.

OEM versions of Windows 7 are identical to Full License Retail versions except for the following:

- OEM versions do not offer any free Microsoft direct support from Microsoft support personnel

- OEM licenses are tied to the very first computer you install and activate it on

- OEM versions allow all hardware upgrades except for an upgrade to a different model motherboard

- OEM versions cannot be used to directly upgrade from an older Windows operating system

 

What is OEM software?:

http://support.microsoft.com/gp/oemsupport_1/en-gb

Licensing FAQs:

http://www.microsoft.com/OEM/en/licensing/sblicensing/Pages/licensing_faq.aspx

 

 

So yes, you are legally allowed to move retail SKUs to another PC as long as you remove that key from previous PC, that's the point of buying retail at a premium cost over OEM, always has been.

huh Illicit?

 

You are legally allowed to move Retail COA/licences to a new PC (3 times it states), it tells you this in the Terms and conditions supplied in the retail box (on COA card iirc) at work atm so a VL customer, but ill check my retail boxes when I get home for you.

 

Apologies if I sound a douche, but ill take what MS tell me professionally and privately as a customer thanks ;) they know what I am legally allowed to do with their product.

I definitely moved the license more times than that using manual reactivation.

 

Also beware of what a corporation puts in their TOS/TOU as it may possibly be in conflict with consumer protection laws in your country. (using the general "your" here, not you specifically).

 

And again, you are not answering my question if the Win10 license will be transferable if the license used for the upgrade was retail or if the Win 8 license resulted from the 25$ update when they first launched was easily transferable from machine to machine if the original win 7 license used for the upgrade was retail.

Did you miss what Stoffel said?  " We all understand what you are asking, but all we can do is speculate, MS is the only one at the moment who knows how this will work.

If you don't want us to speculate, don't ask questions nobody knows the answer too at the moment!"

 

You want answers to questions Microsoft has yet to answer.  Just how good of an answer do you expect to get here?  

This is what I've heard:

 

Windows 10 will be available as a free upgrade from Windows Update ONLY.  

 

There will be NO clean install of Windows 10 unless you are using Windows 10 dedicated keys.

 

Microsoft will NOT be assigning new keys for users upgrading for free from Windows 7 or Windows 8.1, but the current keys will be accepted during the upgrade process from Windows Update.

 

Once devices are upgrade to Windows 10, they will be supported until Windows 10 reaches EOL.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • Endless Wars  Endless Shrimp!!! 🦐    
    • How can it beat a Steam machine without a serious GPU? The two CU iGPU only provides about 5fps in gaming. That's not going to make any gamer happy.
    • Anthropic introduces Claude Tag, a new AI teammate for Slack by Fiza Ali Anthropic has announced Claude Tag, a new feature that lets teams work with Claude directly inside Slack. The idea is simple: once Claude is added to a Slack workspace and given access to selected channels, users can tag @Claude in conversations and assign tasks. Claude can then work through those requests using connected tools and data sources before posting its results back into a Slack thread. What makes Claude Tag different from a typical chatbot is that it's designed to operate as a shared assistant for an entire team rather than a single user. Everyone in a channel interacts with the same Claude instance. This allows the team members to see ongoing work and continue tasks started by others. Furthermore, Anthropic says the AI can build context over time by following conversations in channels where it has permission to operate. This means users don't have to repeatedly provide the same background information for every request. The system is also designed for asynchronous work. Instead of waiting for responses in a chat window, users can assign a task to Claude and return later once the work is complete. Anthropic says Claude can break larger requests into multiple steps and use connected tools to complete them. Moreover, the system can also schedule follow-up tasks and continue working on projects over extended periods. Another feature allows Claude to keep the users updated and follow up on unresolved tasks when its optional "ambient" mode is enabled. The company says the tool is already being used internally for software development, data analysis, support workflows, and debugging. According to Anthropic, around 65% of its product team's code is now generated through its internal version of Claude Tag. For organisations concerned about security, administrators can control which channels, tools, and data sources Claude can access. Separate Claude instances can also be configured for different departments, helping keep information isolated between teams. Administrators can also monitor activity logs, review completed tasks, and set spending limits at both the organisation and channel level. Claude Tag is now available in beta for Claude Enterprise and Claude Team customers and runs on Claude Opus 4.8 that was announced this May. The feature will also replace Anthropic's existing Claude in Slack application, with current users able to migrate within a 30-day migration window. Lastly, eligible customers will receive introductory credits to help teams evaluate the new experience.
    • Beats Studio Pro wireless over-ear ANC headphones drop to their lowest price yet by Fiza Ali Amazon is currently offering the Beats Studio Pro headphones at their all-time low price. The Studio Pro use 40mm active drivers which are designed to improve clarity and reduce distortion compared to previous models, with up to an 80% improvement over the Beats Studio3 Wireless. A built-in digital processor adjusts frequency response to keep the sound balanced rather than overly boosted in any one area. They also include Active Noise Cancelling that adapts to your surroundings to reduce background noise along with a Transparency mode that lets outside sound in when you need awareness of what’s going on around you. Furthermore, the headphones support personalised Spatial Audio with dynamic head tracking as well as Dolby Atmos playback on supported content. Moreover, built-in voice-targeting microphones improve call quality. You can also switch between three sound profiles including Beats Signature for balanced music playback, Entertainment for films and gaming, and Conversation for clearer voice in calls and podcasts. Physically, they are designed to be worn for long periods without feeling heavy or awkward. The ear cushions use UltraPlush engineered leather while metal sliders allow you to adjust the fit. On the connectivity side, the Studio Pro use Class 1 Bluetooth for a stable, long-range wireless connection. There is also a 3.5mm input if you want to plug in directly, including use with in-flight entertainment systems. Controls are located on the headphones and include a "b" button for music and call control, a volume rocker, and a multifunction button used for switching listening modes, EQ settings, power, and pairing. In addition, the headphones offer integration with both Apple and Android devices. On Apple devices, they support one-touch pairing with iCloud-linked devices, hands-free Siri access, Find My tracking based on last connected location, and automatic software updates. On Android devices, they support Google Fast Pair, Audio Switch between compatible devices, and Google Find My Device tracking, with additional features available through the Beats app. When it comes to the battery performance, it is rated at up to 40 hours of listening time with ANC turned off, and up to 24 hours with ANC or Transparency mode enabled. A 10-minute Fast Fuel charge should provide up to 4 hours of playback. Finally, the headphones use a rechargeable lithium-ion battery and charge via USB-C. Beats Studio Pro Wireless Over-Ear ANC Headphones: $149.95 (Amazon US) Good to know This Amazon deal is U.S. specific, and not available in other regions unless specified. We only use first-party seller links (at the time of article publishing); ensure that you purchase from a first-party seller link only. Check out Today's Deals on Amazon | or our recent tech deals. Become a Prime member (for Students or SNAP) via Neowin Get Prime Access - Prime for half price (for qualifying Medicaid, EBT, SNAP) Subscribe to Prime Video, Audible Plus, Music Unlimited or Kindle Unlimited via Neowin As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Rookie
      DaviKar went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Dedicated
      HidekoYamamoto94 earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • One Month Later
      timbobit earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      nates earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      462
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      161
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      110
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      82
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!