Windows 8 upgrade from windows 8 rtm




















This update is for Windows 8. This update lets you start an immediate free upgrade to Windows 10 during the Windows 8. This update applies only to the Windows 8.

It is available only when the OOBE updates are installed. I'm about myself to try, read elsehwere some got same as you but worked when they ran with DVD burned iso and only sounds came out strange.

I installed from USB, checked to install updates. But I have only tried starting the upgrade from Windows, not from boot. Add a comment. Active Oldest Votes. Improve this answer. After reading this, I successfully upgraded to Windows 8. I blogged about it here: blog. So for me, this worked: Download Parallels trial should also do it. Load Windows 8 on your bootcamp partition into Parallels. Parallels will do a bunch of stuff to get the bootcamp partition to behave like a VM you can still login directly into your bootcamp instance.

Let the updates complete and let the Parallels instance restart itself. During the reboot, Parallels may complain about OS X preventing Windows from messing with the boot partition. Just hit OK, and proceed. It'll also warn you that you may have issues booting into the bootcamp partition without Parallels doesn't seem to be a problem. After the upgrade completes, shutdown the Parallels instance cleanly and reboot your Mac into your bootcamp partition.

If all goes well, you should see the driver update spinner, and after a while, it should go to the new setup steps. Nash Nash 21 4 4 bronze badges. Tried the exact steps in the post above, but step 5 never happened. Same blue screen as the screenshot in the first post. His email address is gkeizer computerworld. See more by Gregg Keizer on Computerworld.

Here are the latest Insider stories. More Insider Sign Out. Sign In Register. Sign Out Sign In Register. If you'd like to change some of these settings now, select Customize. For more info, select Learn more about express settings. To learn about how these settings affect your privacy, select Privacy statement.

Next, you'll be asked to sign in. If you already use a Microsoft account to sign in to Windows 8 or Windows RT, your account name will be filled in for you. If you previously used a local account, you can still use it to sign in. We'll send a security code to the alternate email address or phone number you've set up for this account, and you'll need to enter that code to verify that you're the owner of the account. This helps us protect your account and devices when you access sensitive info.

If you don't have alternate contact info set up for the account yet, you'll be asked to provide it now. To sign in with your local account, enter your password. You can always connect to a Microsoft account later, and we recommend giving it a try. Simply put, your Microsoft account is the glue that holds together so many useful features of the new Windows.

With an account, you'll be able to get apps from the Windows Store, automatically sync your settings and documents between PCs, back up your photos to the cloud so you can get to them from anywhere, and see all your contacts from multiple email and social networking accounts together in the People and Mail apps. If this is your first time setting up a PC with Windows 8.

If you already have another PC running Windows 8. Photos you take with this PC are saved to your camera roll folder on this PC, and a smaller copy of each photo is automatically backed up to your OneDrive. When you create a new document, the default save location is OneDrive. But you can always choose to save individual documents locally or on another drive. Windows will save a backup copy of your PC settings to OneDrive. If something ever happens to your PC and you need to replace it, your settings are saved in the cloud and you can transfer them to a new PC instantly.

You can change any of these settings later in PC settings. If you'd prefer to turn off all of these settings now, select Turn off these OneDrive settings not recommended. Windows checks for these critical updates when you finish setting up Windows 8. Downloading and installing these updates might take a few minutes, depending on the updates you need. Your PC might also need to restart one or more times to complete the updates.



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