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#300
I am getting error 0xd000002d all the time I try to install this build.
I am getting error 0xd000002d all the time I try to install this build.
Installation is just a beginning. ISO is installation offline. Update/upgrade is installation online.
The Insider's "job" starts after the installation... :)
Not feasible, Hippsie. I'm pretty sure that Microsoft is well aware of every installation failure, since we've granted them permission to know what we're doing with our systems. Thus, there would be no need to prove anything. However, I believe there is a point beyond which Microsoft will not go. And providing an ISO to some, but not all, regardless of the reasoning behind it, in my not so humble opinion, would create such a ground swell of protest . . . need I say more?
So the build before 16226 failed to upgrade from previous build. Did you have to fresh install that? Fresh install 16226 as well?
The way I understand it sfc does no good if the Windows image becomes unserviceable, even if sfc reports no corruption.
You may want to try DISM first.
Use DISM to Repair Windows 10 Image Windows 10 Performance Maintenance Tutorials
Do you have a 16226 ISO?
I did not do a fresh install for 16226. I paused the updates until a 16226 update was available, then updated to that without issue. I did not use any iso, for none of the updates.
I also saw in the feedback hub that some people are having the same install issue. I will just pause the update again and will wait for the next version.
I see. You may want to update by making an ISO using this method: UUP to ISO - Create Bootable ISO from Windows 10 Build Upgrade Files Windows 10 Installation Upgrade Tutorials
Opinions are just like belly buttons; everyone has one. And now it's time for me to exercise mine . . .
I'm going to address mine as if I'm talking about you, Kari; not to you.
I've been using hints, tips, tutorials, etc., etc., that Kari has written for years now. Can it have actually been years!? Yup.
One of the first tutorials I used was "ESD to ISO". And yep, we had all those folks telling us even back then that Microsoft didn't want us making ISOs; that we needed to do the update. If it didn't work, try waiting for the next one.
Kari has contributed greatly to my Windows 10 User Experience.
If we aren't supposed to create our own ISOs, why isn't there a clause prohibiting such in the agreement we signed.
Please take note . . . Kari has a new badge! He is now a Windows Insider MVP. Wear your new badge proudly, Kari!
Since Kari has become a Microsoft MVP, I find it hard to believe that MS could give such an award but be totally unaware that Kari has created tutorials (almost from the get-go) on creating ISOs of Insider Builds so that we could clean install Windows 10 Insider Builds.
Looking at it from the perspective of one who "knows just enough to be really dangerous"; whose system may get hosed by "drive by" malware, "PUPs", a bad Windows Update, or any number of reasons, does Microsoft tell us to just sit still and do nothing? I think not! Kari has shown us more ways to install Windows than I can shake a stick at!
Read the above quote from Kari again! Ya wanna know what I think? Well, even if ya don't wanna know what I think, I'm going to tell you anyway! Kari won (Yes, I said he won) his Windows Insider MVP partially because of his work within TenForums for you and me. So we could have as great an experience with Windows 10 as possible.
While Kari tests on more of a "developer", and I test more on an "end user" level, he has helped me tremendously in more areas than I care to number. If for some reason I need to do a clean install, Kari has provided a way for me to do that. And if the truth be known, a very large percentage of TenForums membership have used at least one and possibly several of Kari's tutorials.
I think the bottom line here is that if Microsoft wanted us to test through Windows Update only, they would have specifically forbidden any other type of installation in the agreement we signed when we joined the Insider Program.
Well, then I'll be the first to make a sign and stand in line, for MS releases an ISO right after the slow ringers get the update. The last I knew anyway. It makes no sense to me unless there's significant reason MS has for a system to be used with an old build on it. I haven't heard them give any.