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I used my Aspire One all thru the Windows 7 beta, RC and eventually RTM. It ran very well on that little PC. Eventually, my battery stopped holding a charge and is now running Ubuntu Server under my desk. There really isn't much to installing the Win10 preview. Download the Windows 10 ISO from here: Download the Windows ISO to USB tool: Use the second download to take the ISO (the first download) and turn it into a bootable USB drive. Plug that into your Aspire One and go through the installer. You may have to choose the clean install, I don't think Windows 10 can be upgraded from XP, but I'm not sure.
Be aware that the Windows installer will delete everything from your netbook, so back up as necessary beforehand. If you try it, report back. Micro expression training tool 30 download.
Let us know how it works! I'd like to share my experience in installing an April 2015 Insider Preview Windows 10 in an Acer Aspire One, model KAV10. First of all, I upgraded the RAM memory to 2 GB. I downloaded the 32 bit version of Windows 10 and the Windows USB/DVD Download Tool, as oriented by jmshub. I burnt a 4GB pendrive and replaced the original HD with a spare one so I could make a fresh install. The first try wasn't so straight as I expected.
The installation process hanged up in the final steps so I had to start it over. In the second time, though, everything went well and the installation process has been completed after two programmed reboots in about 1:30 hs. Windows 10 recognized and installed camera and touchpad drivers and both of them are running perfectly. The boot time is incredibly shorter than XP's and the performance is very good too. I experienced no problem with screen size or resolution, my main concern before the installation. Until now the update has been worth! I installed Windows 8 on my Acer Aspire One Netbook when Windows 8 was first released - I bought one of those 25 licences that microsoft made available when it was first released.
Windows 8 works great on the netbook and I later upgraded it to 8.1. The Windows 10 compatability wizard reports the following: What I have now done in preparation is to create a 'System Image' onto an external USB Hard drive. This way if the upgrade goes wonky I can restore my computer back to where it was when I created the system image. You create a System Image from within Wndows.
Goto Control panel Recovery File History System Iamge Backup then simply follow the prompts. I have an Acer Aspire 722-0473.
It runs the C-60 1 Ghz with 2 cores (with Turbo to 1.3) and a Radeon 6290 (or something like that). It has a 5400 rpm hard disk. I was able to install Windows 10 ( 64 bit) over the air. However I soon noticed that the system was idling at 50% of the cpu resources. I back graded to Win 7 Pro for a while and then made another stab at it. I 'turned every feature offered during the install off'.
And it still had a very high idle level. Needless to say when that background processes were that busy the foreground wasn't all that responsive. I have lately found a vendor who sells the recovery disk I need to restore my Aspire back to its 'original' condition (Win 7 64 bit Home Premium, with a fair amount of bloatware). I will be using that to see if I can return to my 'original' experience under Windows 7.
Some more enterprising blogger needs to investigate and report what you have to do to turn all background features off and strip out 99% of the eye candy applications that are also probably running background processes. Then maybe it will run on my hardware. I had the same netbook model (A150) back in 2012 and I had successfully installed Windows 7 32-bit and Windows 8 32-bit. With only 1GB RAM there was no reason to install 64-bit. I remember hacking the registry to enable 1024x768 resolution so I could use Metro Interface.
Windows 10 should not be very different. Just install latest Windows 8 or 7 Intel drivers, hack the registry to enable 1024x768 and you should be good to go. Unfortunately I have sold mine to a friend, so I cannot test it and confirm it.