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#30
Sometimes it will take a day or so to automatically activate due to however busy the activation servers are at the time. If you rushed to see the second upgrade you may not have allowed enough time for 10 to activate itself. The gatherostate however makes for a good safety net!
I attempted the clean install about 30 days after I successfully completed the upgrade from Windows 8.1. I gave the clean install it a little more than a week to activate before contacting MS support for the 2nd time and got a "so sorry you'll have to start all over again"....grrr.
This method looks promising, I'm going to get my ducks in a row and try it out soon.
Thanks!
I used this method to clean install Win 10 in a dual boot configuration with Win 7. I copied the file from my Win 10 DVD (I will not use USB booting), ran it on the Windows 7 desktop, then copied the GenuineTicket.xml to a flash drive. I had already created a new partition on my hard drive. I then booted from the DVD, did a custom install telling it to install in the new partition and skipping the product key insertion (it asked twice). After Win 10 was up and running, I copied and pasted the ticket file to the location given in the tutorial, rebooted, and voila, Windows is activated. I got Windows 10 free without losing Windows 7.
I find this strange, however. I checked out the ticket location on the computer I upgraded from 8.1 by using the Media Creation Tool and there is no GenuineTicket.xml file present.
Shawn's correct, what MS needs to do is build in technical backstops to augment the EULA... currently one can easily bypass the EULA. Both Windows and Office... This is not the 1900's where it appears it relied on people's consciousness.
Eventually they'll get flagged when checking in with the Microsoft activation servers, and both will be deactivated.
This is why I'm hoping they'll listen to my warning about violating the EULA like that.
It is not clearly stated in either the EULA or the FAQs that you can't have both. It just gives the regular upgrade procedure but does not mention dual booting anywhere. Granted, without using this tutorial, you can't do it so maybe it's the tutorial that is in violation more than me. The tutorial tells you how to circumvent the normal procedure which is exactly what I did. I just took it a step further to see if it would work and I actually didn't think it would.
You can't be in violation if it is not clearly stated that what you did is wrong, and, it is not.