I've held-off doing Server 2016 installations so far but I'm thinking the OS is probably mature enough to start using now. Or, perhaps more importantly, Server 2012 is getting a little too long in the tooth to continue using it on new installations.
Any thoughts/experiences on this point?
Also, has anyone successfully converted Server 2016 from evaluation version to Volume or OEM (as per the info below)? I'm planning to take it for a test drive by installing and configuring the evaluation version on a new server. It would be good not to have to re-install if everything works as planned ...
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/get-started/supported-upgrade-paths
Any thoughts/experiences on this point?
Also, has anyone successfully converted Server 2016 from evaluation version to Volume or OEM (as per the info below)? I'm planning to take it for a test drive by installing and configuring the evaluation version on a new server. It would be good not to have to re-install if everything works as planned ...
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/get-started/supported-upgrade-paths
Converting a current evaluation version to a current retail version
You can convert the evaluation version of Windows Server 2016 Standard to either Windows Server 2016 Standard (retail) or Datacenter (retail). Similarly, you can convert the evaluation version of Windows Server 2016 Datacenter to the retail version.
At any time after installing Windows Server 2016, you can freely convert it between a retail version, a volume-licensed version, or an OEM version. The edition remains the same during this conversion. If you are starting with an evaluation version, convert it to the retail version first, and then you can inter-convert as described here.
To do this, from an elevated command prompt, run: slmgr /ipk <key>
Where <key> is the appropriate volume-license, retail, or OEM product key.