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HP Recommended
HP ProBook 650 G1 L4A21UT#ABA
Microsoft Windows 10 (64-bit)

I recently upgraded from Win 7 to Win 10. I'm assuming the Win 7 restore partition was untouched. Is that a concern?

 

Also, when I rebooted after the upgrade, accelerometerST.exe was "Not Found."

I googled for that and found the link to the Win 10 version but I was unable to download it.

Should I just ignore the missing .exe?

 

Regards,

Joe (aka Malcolm)

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions
HP Recommended

@K8MP

 

Creating Recovery Media is something done before the partition is non-functional.

 

The "Upgrade" comes with the ability to "go back" to your previously installed OS.  There is a time limit:  If you wish to "go back", you must do so within 30 (or 31?) days from the date / time of the migration to Windows 10. 

 

The "go back" is a Windows provided mechanism -- it appears that the method works (to restore the previous OS / full environment) most of the time.  Should the "go back" method not work, you best be prepared to install the Operating System. 

 

Now that you have your Windows 10 Digital License (also known as "Entitlement"), you can "go back" or reinstall Windows 10 at a later date.  Your Windows 10 license "sticks", that is, Microsoft has record or your License so you can return-to / install Windows 10 on this same machine. 

 

Helpful advice from DavidPK

Windows 10 Upgrade and HP System Recovery

 

Your system provides Windows 10 Drivers -- this is a good indicator that the computer will run Windows 10 with fewer issues than if the system were not supported for the new OS.

 

If you decide to stay on Windows 10, consider using image / disk ghosting software to create "disk recovery" media.

 

Example:

Macrium Reflect Free

 

There is an active Macrium Forum where you can read about how others view / use the product.

 

When you see a Post that helps you,

Inspires you, provides fresh insight,

Or teaches you something new,

Click the "Thumbs Up" on that Post.

 

Fixed / Answered? Click that post Accept as Solution to help others find Answers.

Dragon-Fur

View solution in original post

3 REPLIES 3
HP Recommended

@K8MP

 


@K8MP wrote:

I recently upgraded from Win 7 to Win 10. I'm assuming the Win 7 restore partition was untouched. Is that a concern?

 

Also, when I rebooted after the upgrade, accelerometerST.exe was "Not Found."

I googled for that and found the link to the Win 10 version but I was unable to download it.

Should I just ignore the missing .exe?

 

Regards,

Joe (aka Malcolm)


System:

HP ProBook 650 G1 Notebook PC

 

Original Recovery Partition

 

In most instances, the Recovery Partition is destroyed by a migration to a newer Operating System.  It "looks" OK -- and no longer functions.

 

Fix the accelerometerST error:

 

Driver Information:   HP 3D DriveGuard Software

 

 

  • Remove the existing driver

 

Control Panel > icon view > Programs and Features >

scroll, find,  Right-Click on HP 3D DriveGuide  > Uninstall 

 

  • Close programs > Restart the notebook > log in

 

  • Install the HP 3D DriveGuard driver

 

 

When you see a Post that helps you,

Inspires you, provides fresh insight,

Or teaches you something new,

Click the "Thumbs Up" on that Post.

 

Fixed / Answered? Click that post Accept as Solution to help others find Answers.

Dragon-Fur

HP Recommended

Thank you Dragon-Fur.

I was able to download sp71839.exe  I have not tried the procedure yet. 

Regarding the Recovery Partition, I suspected the Win 7 recovery partition was now useless. I saw the Alert for Win 10 upgrades on your site. (Alas, I saw it post-upgrade. Shucks !!)

There was mention of creating Recovery Media. Is that something I can do now or should it have been pre-upgrade?

 

Regards, Joe

 

HP Recommended

@K8MP

 

Creating Recovery Media is something done before the partition is non-functional.

 

The "Upgrade" comes with the ability to "go back" to your previously installed OS.  There is a time limit:  If you wish to "go back", you must do so within 30 (or 31?) days from the date / time of the migration to Windows 10. 

 

The "go back" is a Windows provided mechanism -- it appears that the method works (to restore the previous OS / full environment) most of the time.  Should the "go back" method not work, you best be prepared to install the Operating System. 

 

Now that you have your Windows 10 Digital License (also known as "Entitlement"), you can "go back" or reinstall Windows 10 at a later date.  Your Windows 10 license "sticks", that is, Microsoft has record or your License so you can return-to / install Windows 10 on this same machine. 

 

Helpful advice from DavidPK

Windows 10 Upgrade and HP System Recovery

 

Your system provides Windows 10 Drivers -- this is a good indicator that the computer will run Windows 10 with fewer issues than if the system were not supported for the new OS.

 

If you decide to stay on Windows 10, consider using image / disk ghosting software to create "disk recovery" media.

 

Example:

Macrium Reflect Free

 

There is an active Macrium Forum where you can read about how others view / use the product.

 

When you see a Post that helps you,

Inspires you, provides fresh insight,

Or teaches you something new,

Click the "Thumbs Up" on that Post.

 

Fixed / Answered? Click that post Accept as Solution to help others find Answers.

Dragon-Fur

† The opinions expressed above are the personal opinions of the authors, not of HP. By using this site, you accept the <a href="https://www8.hp.com/us/en/terms-of-use.html" class="udrlinesmall">Terms of Use</a> and <a href="/t5/custom/page/page-id/hp.rulespage" class="udrlinesmall"> Rules of Participation</a>.