A regular part of the “being me” gig is friends and family will often drop off devices and ask me to see if I can fix them for them. I don’t really mind – honestly! When I first started doing IT work I figured out that I could build people decent computers from scratch components, and they could get a better computer than they could buy from the local electronics store for less. Which was great for them, and I could charge a little more than it cost me to put the thing together so that I could make a small profit for my time. The thing I never figured in was that there was an implicit understanding that they would have unlimited support from me FOREVER, for every device I sold, and since it was mostly family and friends, I mostly said yes. Hence the 2 AM phone call 2 years after I’d sold someone a PC asking for help on how to do a formula in an Excel spreadsheet that would average the values in a column and spit out a standard deviation… Hence I don’t really sell PC’s anymore. But when someone I know asks me to help them with something, I really don’t mind and do it if I can, and sometimes it leads into interesting territory where I get to learn and try new stuff. A friend of mine gave me his ViewSonic ViewPad 10Pro tablet – the thing wasn’t working for him at all – he described it as a dual-boot (it isn’t, although it can use the Android Swype technology) and broken. It also isn’t, it’s just that WIndows 7 pro is not built for touch screen, so I told him I would try to put Windows 8 on it. Here’s how I proceeded;
The ViewSonic has a sealed case with a 20 G SSD, and HDMI and a USB 2 ports. To get Win8 on this machine, I used the USB port, but first I need a working copy of Windows 8
STEPS
1) Download a copy of the Windows 8 iso – I have a legal copy available through Dreamspark and the college I work at, so I will download and use this. A quick search shows that you can buy and download a copy for a mere $40, but if you are super cheap and just want to try it to see if it works, why not just use the evaluation versions available? here?
2) Create a bootable USB media from the iso, to do this I used the Microsoft Disk Creator, available from the Microsoft Store Here. This will take the system files from the ISO, copy them to a USB stick and make the USB bootable. This tool is easy to run, but will format the USB, so make sure you have copied off anything on it before you get going.
3) Insert the USB into the tablet and reboot it – I had some challenges with this, this tablet came with a bluetooth keyboard and pressing F10 on the keyboard did not boot to USB, so I tried a USB keyboard, which worked, I hit F2, got into the BIOS, made changes to the boot sequence, then plugged my iso/USB back into the USB port and rebooted – worked!
Getting into the BIOS will vary by device, I know on some tablets you need to hit the home key one time and it should boot to USB – that’s it.
When it came to the section where I was required to enter the license, I swapped the keyboard back in and out as required with the USB stick, and then chose to erase the existing partitions and do a clean install – I left the USB in and away it went…
A couple of extra notes – The bootable USB stick you use does not need to be especially large – through magic and wizardry (I’m looking at you, Hermione Granger) the entire Win 8 DVD takes up less than 3 G on my USB stick. Once installed I had issues with drivers, but that’s about it. An interesting project, now I have to figure out how long I should keep this before I give it back to my friend.