I manage about a dozen small businesses in my area. I’m upgrading them all to Windows 10 (they are currently on Windows 7), because of insurance and liability they cannot stay on Windows 7.
I’m planning on using the same approach as I did when I installed Windows 7. These businesses have 3-10 computers each, all are running peer-to-peer using a standalone Windows 7 acting as the server. It’s never been clean or easy to change the name on a user account, so to save a lot of installation time I came up with this process.
All desktops are exactly the same – model, hardware, etc.
All Laptops are exactly the same.
I will be installing Windows 10 with a local account NOT a Microsoft Account.
Below where I refer to one system – I actually mean 2 – one desktop and one laptop.
- What I do is setup a system: I create a standard user called “USER” and install all appropriate apps, updates, drivers, etc. I then make an MASTER image of the disk.
- I use that image to create a new system and configure that for a particular business – special software, printers, etc. I make another image – BUSINESS MASTER.
- I use this second image to create each user’s computer. I change the computer name and activate and license the software for each user (yes they are in compliance with licenses). Each computer has the same user name: USER, but since this is a peer-to-peer, it’s never been a problem in the past. Each computer will end up with a different password. I do assign the individual’s name to an environmental variable so I can track things like backing up data from a workstation (most is stored on the pseudo server). I make an INDIVIDUAL image .
All these images (Master, Business-Master, and Individual) get stored on duplicated external HDs.
Now it may seem a little strange to have all user accounts with the same name, but being a peer-to-peer network, this hasn’t caused any problems.
The questions I have are:
- Will this work with Windows 10?
- Are there any changes I should make to my process?
Thanks,
Marc