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#30
Thanks for taking the time very educational Drew
Not sure what to make of this, but I wouldn't exactly pat myself on the back as that's Microsoft "official" statement, however I'm am aware of backdoors or loop holes, as I've we've all used a few ourselves with upgrades so...
And Bongo did provide pause for the cause so....
But "officially" that's Microsoft's stance.
Thanks
Things do indeed change, example, MS never used to supply downloads of iso files for their OSes. This exercise explains my avatar.
My dad who has a Windows 8 laptop he uses for when he's traveling overseas (he's a frequent flyer!) hasn't been upgraded to Windows 8.1 for one reason alone:
I advised against it.
Back when Windows 8.1 first came out, there was a slew of stability bugs and whatnot that simply didn't fly with us since my dad used the laptop for business in locations where I can't provide immediate support. The laptop needs to work flawlessly while he's traveling.
There was also the argument that Windows 8 was mostly working fine for him, and as such I advised against the upgrade. I haven't followed up since because my dad has found absolutely no problems staying with Windows 8 and I personally haven't had any incentive to research Windows 8.1 and advocate its use.
Basically, a combination of "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" and my personal distaste for Windows 8 worked together beautifully.
We actually did discuss installing Windows 7 onto the laptop since my dad truthfully wasn't too happy about using Windows 8.
However, we ultimately decided against the idea due to the fact that the machine in question is a laptop designed for Windows 8. Finding compatible Windows 7 drivers would be a chore, and working around UEFI Secure Boot would be a nuisance regardless of how easy it is in practice.
Like I mentioned, this laptop needed to work first and foremost, so Windows 8 was there to stay simply by virtue of being there from the start.
About the MS link, it does describe how to upgrade without ms account or login:
But this is not explained whatsoever while doing the installation, concealing it is part of the covert way they try to trick everyone into their tile\phone os dreamworld.Windows 8.1 is designed to be used with a Microsoft account, so we recommend that you give it a try -\- But if you're sure you want to use a local account instead, choose Create a new account, and then on the new account page, choose Continue using my existing account.