Mar 12 2019 09:58 PM
Mar 13 2019 01:52 AM
SolutionIt looks like you installed Windows Server 2016 Core. The default installation of Windows Server 2016 is without any Desktop. You configure and use it via command line, PowerShell, or in a real production environment remotely with management tools from a workstation.
Without more information about how you installed the operating system (did you install to a separate partition or did you wipe your current Harddisk and installed it over your previous operating system,...) I can't tell you what your best course of action is to restore your Notebook to "normal".
If you wiped your Harddisk and did a fresh install of Server 2016, without any backup beforehand, your chances of getting back your data are slim.
If you just want to get a normal client operating system backup onto the device, you should download a current Windows 10 installation media from Microsoft (for the version of Windows 10 you own a license for of course). Then boot with this media from USB or DVD, delete all current partitions in the setup dialog and let Windows setup do it's job.
If you want to learn Windows Server you should really do so in a virtualized environment instead of a physical machine. You could, for example, install Hyper-V on your Windows 10 Client and run a Windows Server instance inside of Hyper-V. With this you can experiment all you want without damaging your Host-System. Also to make it easier for looking around Windows Server make sure you choose the "Windows Server 2016 with Desktop Experience" installation option when installing it. This way you have an almost familiar Desktop environment.
Mar 13 2019 05:28 AM
Jul 20 2020 03:22 PM
Jul 22 2020 07:32 PM
@Kla555 I am pretty sure he is referring to the folder C:\Windows.old\ where you will find a backup of the previous set of user profiles and some of the application data.
I do not remember if the Windows Server Core install behavior is the same as other Windows versions, so you may have to get a backup of your current C:\Windows.old\ folder content (probably more than 20 GB) before you start reinstalling using the original Windows 10 media for your computer.
Oct 22 2020 06:04 AM
Oct 22 2020 06:11 AM
Oct 22 2020 07:04 AM
Oct 24 2020 03:52 PM
@Yosef360 Even though I don't know exactly how to restore your previous Windows OS, I suggest that you check if it is possible to shut down your laptop computer, then see if the hard drive has got its own access panel on the bottom of your computer, or if you need to disassemble the whole chassis to get to the hard drive. Anyway, my suggestion is mainly to get the hard drive out of your computer and connect it in a desktop computer as a secondary drive (or third drive, depending on the desktop computer) to make a backup of your files before moving it back to the laptop and reinstall your laptop from scratch.
Please note that whenever you experiment with installing a different OS to your computer, you always run a risk of losing data or even the entire setup from your previous installation, so most OS install procedures warn us about installing the OS on any existing system with a running OS, personal data and personal configuration. You may want to enlist local help or even contacting any local computer support if you do not have the experience to disassemble or make a backup from a hard drive.
Depending on the type of hard drive, it could range from an easy operation with a dedicated access panel for the hard drive and the hard drive itself being a regular SATA drive which can easily be connected inside a desktop computer with enough space to mount more than one HDD, to a compact laptop computer with the HDD being a micro drive like a memory card, which makes it more cumbersome to connect it inside the other computer, unless you or your support has got access to any PCI Express card conversion kit for mounting it to a SATA-based computer.
I can only wish you the best of luck in getting help with making a backup and reinstalling your computer. I have done something similar in the past, but at that time I had easy access to enough additional hardware to move a HDD from my laptop to a desktop computer and get the data and configuration files I needed, but I usually had to wipe my laptop HDD and reinstall everything, either using the OEM install media or a Windows ISO image (via USB drive or DVD).
Jan 30 2021 09:39 AM
Feb 22 2021 10:29 PM
@Femi-Peters To me, it looks like user you replied to has yet to comment whether they found any easy way to restore their previous Windows OS. I find it unlikely, though. Note that your situation is a support scenario where you should create a full backup of your current drive contents before reinstalling your original OS, depending on computer brand, installation media, and so on.
May 09 2021 03:05 AM
May 09 2021 03:09 AM
May 11 2021 11:01 AM
Feb 04 2022 12:12 PM
what steps did you take to get past C:\users\administrator
to the point where you had windows installed again. Thank you, Melissa
Feb 18 2022 10:10 AM
Mar 12 2022 04:54 AM
Nov 15 2022 12:40 PM - edited Nov 15 2022 12:41 PM
@Abdullatif09 having same issues too ,How did you get pass the command prompt ?
Nov 15 2022 11:20 PM
@Nappyboy the system files are probably overwritten so you need to install windows again from a USB
Nov 16 2022 12:14 PM
@Abdullatif09 do you mind giving step on how to do that via usb? And hope it wont prompt me to command ?
Mar 13 2019 01:52 AM
SolutionIt looks like you installed Windows Server 2016 Core. The default installation of Windows Server 2016 is without any Desktop. You configure and use it via command line, PowerShell, or in a real production environment remotely with management tools from a workstation.
Without more information about how you installed the operating system (did you install to a separate partition or did you wipe your current Harddisk and installed it over your previous operating system,...) I can't tell you what your best course of action is to restore your Notebook to "normal".
If you wiped your Harddisk and did a fresh install of Server 2016, without any backup beforehand, your chances of getting back your data are slim.
If you just want to get a normal client operating system backup onto the device, you should download a current Windows 10 installation media from Microsoft (for the version of Windows 10 you own a license for of course). Then boot with this media from USB or DVD, delete all current partitions in the setup dialog and let Windows setup do it's job.
If you want to learn Windows Server you should really do so in a virtualized environment instead of a physical machine. You could, for example, install Hyper-V on your Windows 10 Client and run a Windows Server instance inside of Hyper-V. With this you can experiment all you want without damaging your Host-System. Also to make it easier for looking around Windows Server make sure you choose the "Windows Server 2016 with Desktop Experience" installation option when installing it. This way you have an almost familiar Desktop environment.