Fresh Install Windows 10 On Ssd

Posted : adminOn 1/31/2018

Simple tutorial how to install Windows 10 on SSD or HDD drive for beginners. In case I need to do a fresh install of Windows 10, do I need to prepare my SSD in any way, or do I simply got to the Microsoft site and tell it to make a fresh install? Biografi Ulama Salaf Pdf on this page.

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I am trying to do a clean install of windows 10 on my new GE72 Apache. I am installing an SSD as the boot drive. Where can I get my product code for Windows 10? I can try to use magic jelly bean but I have tried that with a different laptop with no success. Would customer support have the code, or when I go to install windows 10 will the bios automatically fill in the reg key? I don't want to get into a situation where I have to buy a new windows key.

Before I open up the laptop to check, does anyone know if the GE 72 2QF has an m.2 AHCI slot? I am trying to do a clean install of windows 10 on my new GE72 Apache. I am installing an SSD as the boot drive. Where can I get my product code for Windows 10? Australia Visitor Visa Form 1419.

I can try to use magic jelly bean but I have tried that with a different laptop with no success. Would customer support have the code, or when I go to install windows 10 will the bios automatically fill in the reg key? I don't want to get into a situation where I have to buy a new windows key. Before I open up the laptop to check, does anyone know if the GE 72 2QF has an m.2 AHCI slot? Hi weathermore, I doubt that you'll get a product key for Win 10 from MSI---it doesn't work like that any more.

Product keys with factory-supplied copies of Windows are mostly a thing of the past now---you only get one when you but a retail copy of Windows to prove you didn't bootleg it. I haven't tried to do a clean Win 10 install on a notebook that came with Win 10 pre-installed but I assume it works the same way as the free Win 10 upgrade from Microsoft. I'll explain it and extrapolate from it to your situation.

To get a 'clean' Win 10 installation from the free Win 10 upgrade offered by Microsoft, the user must do a double installation of Win 10. This is all explained on Microsoft's website.

First the user installs the upgrade on top of their existing OS. Then they connect to the internet and allow their upgrade version of Win 10 to authenticate itself with Microsoft's server. This ties the Win 10 installation to the computer hardware. Next, the user must create external Win 10 installation media (CD/DVD or flash drive). Finally, the external installation media is used to do the 'clean' install of Win 10. During the clean installation, the user will usually be prompted for a product key. Simply ignore the prompt and continue.

Since Win 10 was previously authenticated to the hardware, the installer should allow the user to proceed and complete the clean Win 10 installation. Now let's extrapolate this to your situation.

If Win 10 came pre-installed on your GE72 and you've connected to the internet, your copy of Win 10 should have been authenticated. So the first step should be done. Now you need to create external installation media and do the 'clean' install. If your copy of Win 10 has been authenticated, it should allow you to ignore the product key prompts. If it does not, then you'll need to contact Microsoft for help.

In fact, if I were you, I'd check with Microsoft before you begin to make sure there aren't any other 'surprises'. And it would be very wise to make a backup (I prefer a clone) of your Win 10 installation in case the clean install doesn't work and you need to restore your current setup.

IMPORTANT: After you've finished the clean installation, you'll need to install of the MSI drivers for your model notebook in the EXACT order prescribed by MSI. It's a good idea to download them onto external media before you begin. You should also install the utilities as well (some of them---like the SCM, MSI Gaming Center, etc---are required for some of the custom features of your notebook to work). So download all of the MSI drivers and utilities for your model notebook before you begin.

For an overview of the Win 10 installation process, see my thread. The instructions are geared more toward the GT-series which have a dedicated GPU button for switching between the iGPU and dGPU but the general principles apply. The most important thing is to follow the installation order prescribed by MSI for their drivers. Finally, Win 10 has a devious problem whereby its automated update feature will replace OEM drivers (like the MSI drivers required by your notebook). There is no way to turn this feature off. Fortunately, Microsoft provided a workaround where you 'hide' drivers that you do not want Windows updater to touch. You'll probably need to do this for many of the MSI drivers or they will be replaced with generic versions during one of Win 10's auto updates.

If this happens and the MSI drivers are replaced with non-MSI drivers, you'll probably notice that many features stop working on your notebook. For instructions on how to 'hide' MSI drivers, see MSI's FAQ and download the pdf with the instructions. Antivirus 6 Months Trial Programs there. Kind regards, David. GT80 2QE Titan SLI-001 • i7-4720HQ • 32 GB DRAM • 2 x GTX 980M in SLI • 16 GB VRAM (8 GB/GPU) • 2 x 512 GB Micron M600 M.2 SSDs in mirrored Recovery array • 2 x 128 Toshiba M.2 SSDs in mirrored RAID-1 • 2 TB Samsung 850 EVO SSD • MiniPro RAID V2 external case w/ 2 x 2 TB Seagate ST2000LM003 HD in RAID-1 for local backup • 40' Philips 4K UHD BDM4065UC monitor • Gigabyte Aivia Osmium external keyboard • Logitech G903 Lightspeed wireless mouse w/ Powerplay charging mousepad • Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit • Adobe Master Collection CS6. A couple of things to look out for.