The first pic the number says it's the RTM copy (initial release), which may or may not have had One note, but nothing else.
For the first test, I used the ISO: "SW_DVD5_WIN_ENT_10_1607_64BIT_English_MLF_X21-07102.ISO". (Windows 10 Enterprise, Version 1607, Updated July 2016, x64). This would have its origins on VLSC. SHA-1: F9FFEA3A40BF39CCDE105BB064E153343560D73E. As you can see in the About Windows in the screen shot, it's version 1607 from August 2016. RTM would be Version 1507 from July 2015.
Wikipedia has a nice summary of the different versions and their release dates.
Your second pic is also the RTM install, so you have two copies of RTM, but they do not match, my bet is one has been alterred and may not even be Enterprise at all. Editing the registry to look like Enterprise is relatively easy.
For the second test, I used the ISO: "en_windows_10_enterprise_2016_ltsb_x64_dvd_9059483.iso". (Windows 10 Enterprise LTSB, Version 1607, Updated July 2016, x64). This would have its origins on MSDN. SHA1: 031ED6ACDC47B8F582C781B039F501D83997A1CF. And you're right, this one isn't Enterprise, it's
Enterprise LTSB (Long Term Servicing Branch). Related to Enterprise (probably a subset would be more accurate), but a completely separate edition. (FYI, for anyone unfamiliar with LTSB,
this article gives a fairly good primer.) As you can see in the About Windows in the screen shot, it's also version 1607. You can also see the "LTSB" notation in the description. This isn't some stripped down homebrew hack. This is an official Microsoft release direct from the source.
Just for fun, I tried downloading the latest Windows 10 Enterprise Evaluation edition right from
Microsoft's Evaluation Center. While it is evaluation, the only difference between it and full Enterprise is you can't activate it. It's pretty easy for anyone to download and try, so it'll be easy for anyone to recreate this experiment. (You can also download evaluation LTSB if anyone wants to play with that.) I installed it on a fresh virtual machine. No upgrades. Nothing OEM. Local account only. Everything else was default. Here's the result:
Xbox, One Drive, the whole works (no Candy Crush though). But here's the real fun part. It also has the "suggested apps" we were trying to get before! So I guess it does exist as long as you do things just right.
I can't comment on why we're seeing different results, but my experience is everything from home to pro to enterprise is basically the same. You just get a few more features, a few more options and a few more bits of control at each step. The only version that has any significant difference is LTSB.
Leslie, have u tried them ebay oem keys? they reliable ?
While Microsoft's free Windows 10 push ended in 2016, they never turned off the activation servers. If you have a legally activated copy of Windows 7 or 8 (or even an illegally activated copy for the most part, depending on exactly how you did it), you can still do the upgrade and get a proper Windows 10 license. Grab the
Media Creation Tool from the Microsoft website, run it on your Win 7/8 machine and watch Windows 10 magically appear.