

You've never mentioned what the hardware is that you upgraded, but it's become abundantly clear to me that there are a lot of older computers that will probably not ever successfully upgrade to Windows 10, mostly secondary to the lack of drivers for basic devices that work with Win10. clean install of the previous OS, then update to W10 (only needed if a clean install of W10 fails) revert to the previous OS with another attempt at installing W10 (I don't recommend this) revert to the previous OS (both at less than 30 days, and at more than 30 days since initial update) Reset of the OS (considering both the "Keep My Files" and the "Remove Everything" options) continuing to attempt to fix this copy of the OS If this doesn't fix things, then post back so we can discuss the following options:


If they aren't compatible, please uninstall them. If some aren't compatible w/W10, check here about uninstalling them.Ħ) Get ALL available, W10 compatible drivers/programs for any add-on hardware and any software that you installed previously. Then install the freshly downloaded versions.ĥ) Get ALL available, W10 compatible drivers/programs from the manufacturer's website. Then uninstall the current versions from your system. Some A/V have difficulties with the upgrade, so removing them and then reinstalling them will help how they run.ģ) Download fresh copies of the latest, W10 compatible audio and video drivers for your system. Cortana will spit an error as it's still running - don't worry about that for now.Ģ) Uninstall your antivirus, then use the removal tool for it (there's a list of most of them here: ), then install a freshly downloaded, W10 compatible version. Get-AppXPackage | Foreach īe sure that Edge is closed (in Task Manager). This tends to look similar to many other problems that we've seen with W10 being installed on well-used systems.ġ) Run the following command in a Powershell window that's run as an Administrator in order to re-register the Windows Store apps:
