Woke up to my computer being updated to W11 from W10, not too happy about that. I want to use massgrave to change my window to W10 LTSC.
I am not interested in Linux.
So, I went to massgrave.dev and did the script, hit 1, etc. It just say something about permanent changed to key or whatever.
So I went download W10 LTSC iso, hit setup.exe and it asked me for product key. I entered my key, say it’s not right one.
So could somebody run me step by step how to go about it? I’m not really tech savvy. I want literal step by step, telling me exactly what to do.
Thank you.
Edit: folks didn’t really provide step by step here. But I managed to do it. I activiated script via powershell and hit change edition, changed it to LTSC. And then I downloaded window 10 consumer version from massgrave and run setup.exe and done. You might have to do first step shown in first part of massgrave.dev.
So my pc went from w10 to w11 (woyhouy my approval) to w11 LTSC, to w10 IoT enterprise. I’m good now.
You do.
I mean, would you prefer the terminal simply guess at what you’re trying to do and execute random commands?
[xanza@dev ~]$ ll total 76 drwxr-sr-x 11 xanza xanza 4096 Mar 15 02:05 ./ drwxr-xr-x 4 root root 4096 Mar 10 22:16 ../ -rw------- 1 xanza xanza 8677 Mar 15 02:05 .bash_history -rw-r--r-- 1 xanza xanza 887 Mar 13 19:26 .bashrc drwxr-sr-x 5 xanza xanza 4096 Mar 12 22:37 .cache/ -rw-r--r-- 1 xanza xanza 484 Mar 15 01:38 .caddy drwxr-sr-x 9 xanza xanza 4096 Mar 12 22:32 .config/ drwx--S--- 3 xanza xanza 4096 Mar 11 21:23 .docker/ -rw-r--r-- 1 xanza xanza 52 Mar 10 23:13 .gitconfig drwxr-sr-x 3 xanza xanza 4096 Mar 10 23:05 .go/ drwxr-sr-x 6 xanza xanza 4096 Mar 12 18:47 .local/ -rw-r--r-- 1 xanza xanza 49 Mar 10 23:41 .profile drwxr-sr-x 2 xanza xanza 4096 Mar 10 22:38 .sockets/ drwxr-sr-x 2 xanza xanza 4096 Mar 10 22:27 .ssh/ drwxr-sr-x 3 xanza xanza 4096 Mar 15 01:20 .vim/ drwxr-sr-x 4 xanza xanza 4096 Mar 10 23:08 go/ -rw-r--r-- 1 xanza xanza 267 Mar 12 18:31 justfile
Hidden files in *nix are dotfiles; files which are literally hidden from view because they’re appended with a
.
.The gracefulness of how the point flew right over your head was breathtaking
ll is an alias of
ls -la
not all distros will knowll
by default unless you add it to your aliases.I was demonstrating the ease of showing hidden files, not proselytizing that
ll
is in every distro… Not sure what you’re trying to accomplish with this post.Probably trying to stop OP from typing
ll
in a distro where it doesn’t exist and getting even more entrenched in their belief that Linux is hard.Again, you’re completely missing the point here. Focusing on the wrong thing. Goose for the gander.