Tech Advisor

HOW TO MOVE FROM WINDOWS 7 TO 10

You have several choices, including a loophole that may still be free. MARK HACHMAN reports

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If you’re a Windows 7 user, your deadline is nearing: Windows 7 officially exits support on 14 January 2020, so it’s getting very close to the time you need to upgrade to Windows 10.

‘End of support’ means that your Windows 7 or Office 2010 software will no longer receive updates,

including security updates, according to Microsoft. If you’re a consumer, there’s really no option but to upgrade to Windows 10. If your PC is part of a Windows 10 Profession­al or Enterprise volume license, joined to a domain, your company may be willing to pay Microsoft a per-device fee to maintain support for 2020. But that’s an option only for business PCs, not everyday users.

What to do after Windows 7 support ends

At this point, you have several choices:

1. Ignore the deadline, including the pop-up warnings you’ve probably already received.

2. Buy a new copy of Windows 10, and install it.

3. Hope that the free upgrade loophole still exists.

4. Buy a new Windows 10 PC and migrate your existing files over to the new machine.

Note that these options also apply to Windows 8.1, whose support ends in 2023.

Option 1: Risk your entire PC

We wouldn’t recommend the first option: ignoring the deadline altogether. Essentiall­y, at least where Microsoft is concerned, your PC will simply cease to exist. Thirdparty antivirus software, apps, utilities, games and other software will still work. But Microsoft won’t upgrade any of its browser software, and if a vulnerabil­ity is discovered for Windows 7, it won’t be patched. There will be no technical support for Windows 7. You’re on your own.

One exception? Oddly enough, it’s Office. If you subscribe to Office 365 and run Windows 7, you’ll still receive security updates for Office 365 for the next 3 years, until January 2023. But you won’t receive any new Office 365 features, which are one of the reasons for buying Office 365. Office 2010 and the newer standalone Office suites will be ‘supported’, too – but only if the problem is specific to Office, and not to the interactio­n between Office and Windows 7. In that case, you’re stuck.

Option 2: Buy a new Windows 10 license

Second, you can upgrade your existing PC with a new Windows 10 license.

At one point, upgrading to Windows 10 was as simple as clicking a button and signing up for the free upgrade. Unfortunat­ely, that window has closed – maybe. That means paying £219 for Windows 10 Pro, or £119 for Windows 10 Home. That will buy you

a USB key with the Windows 10 software installed, which you can then insert into your PC and perform the necessary upgrade.

Option 3: Upgrade to Windows 10 for free

There may be a third option. Microsoft gave Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 users an entire year after the launch of Windows 10 (until 31 July, 2016) to upgrade to Windows 10 for free, and then until the end of 2017 to use an assistive loophole to gain access. However, Microsoft apparently never turned off the Windows 10 upgrade servers, according to ZDNet reporter Ed Bott. So you may end up lucking out: You might be able to upgrade from Windows 7 to Windows 10 for free.

If you have a Windows 7 PC, simply visit the Windows 10 download page, and download the upgrade tool onto your PC. (You’ll have to accept the

license terms.) Windows 7 Starter, Home Basic, and Home Premium will upgrade to Windows 10 Home, while the other Windows 7 Profession­al and Ultimate editions will be replaced with Windows 10 Pro.

You can either perform an in-place upgrade to upgrade to Windows 10 directly on the PC, or else download the tool onto a separate USB key (with at least 8GB of free space) or onto a CD-R or rewritable DVD. The latter option will allow you to upgrade multiple PCs.

Note that you’ll still need a valid Windows 7 license for the tool to work. If, for some reason, Windows doesn’t detect the license on the machine, you may need to enter it manually. You may need to dig out the old Windows 7 license key – our license-key tutorial can help out here, especially the section on using the Magical Jelly Bean Key Finder. You may also have the license key tucked away on a sticker on the laptop or desktop. (The product key should be five sets of letters and numbers, formatted like this: xxxxx-xxxxxxxxxx-xxxxx-xxxxx)

Be sure to back up everything you wouldn’t want to lose: documents and photos, at a minimum. That means copying those files to a backup hard drive, DVD, or the cloud. This is a ‘better safe than sorry’ scenario: by default, Windows will preserve the apps, settings, and files when it upgrades your system to Windows 10. (You can also back up your files in Windows 7, and restore them later in Windows 10.)

We can’t say how long the process will take. From downloadin­g the tool and the necessary files, and performing the upgrade, and possibly downloadin­g

any additional patches, it’s a good idea to allot at least an hour to the process, perhaps more. The process will also be complicate­d by how fast your broadband connection is, and whether your PC uses a spinning hard drive or SSD.

Once the process completes, it’s time to check on the status of your files: were your photos preserved? Your documents? It’s at this point that you may want to copy back the files you backed up, if they aren’t there. Double-check applicatio­ns, including antivirus programs, to make sure the license keys are still intact. It’s also a good time to familiariz­e yourself with how

to set up a new Windows 10 computer and how to personaliz­e your PC, just to be sure you’re taking full advantage of Windows 10.

If you’re upgrading on older hardware, Windows 10 may run more slowly than Windows 7, just due to the increased load on your processor and hard drive. Resetting your PC may help: click the search box in the Taskbar at the bottom of the screen, then type in reset or reset my PC. That will take you to the Recovery menu in the Settings, where you’ll have the option of reinstalli­ng Windows yet again. That may help improve performanc­e, but it will also take even more time to complete.

Option 4: Buy a new PC

The fourth option is simply to buy a new PC, with all-updated hardware. Chances are you’ll be buying a much faster CPU, a better graphics processor, and probably a lightning-fast SSD storage drive as well.

Bottom line

When Windows 7 officially exits support on 14 January, 2020, that PC will be at risk of attacks from malware that Microsoft simply won’t patch. Microsoft’s attitude toward the transition has ranged from gentle reminders to starker, more fearsome warnings, and it’s not clear what language Microsoft will use to remind users that it’s time to upgrade. Neverthele­ss, what with the free time we hope you have during the holidays, and the looming deadline – the time to migrate from Windows 7 to Windows 10 is now.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? At the time of writing, Microsoft is charging the same amount for a copy of Windows 10 Home that it can send you on a USB, as well as downloadin­g it over the Internet
At the time of writing, Microsoft is charging the same amount for a copy of Windows 10 Home that it can send you on a USB, as well as downloadin­g it over the Internet
 ??  ?? Go to the Windows 10 download page and download the upgrade tool
Go to the Windows 10 download page and download the upgrade tool
 ??  ?? You may see the Windows 10 Out of the Box Experience (OOBE) when the upgrade completes, together with encouragem­ent to sign in with a Microsoft account
You may see the Windows 10 Out of the Box Experience (OOBE) when the upgrade completes, together with encouragem­ent to sign in with a Microsoft account

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