Imagine I get hardware without TPM or something, that is not supported by Win11.
I will not run an EOL Win10 as the machine needs to be connected to the internet. Tbh isolating stuff in a VM could be an idea but I dont know.
Its not for me but a noob with 0 tech knowledge, that says all…
How stable are the available hardware check bypasses? Is Micro$ already starting to aggressively block those?
I would not want to buy a PC to find out Win11 doesnt boot anymore in a few months…
Thanks!
I put windows 11 on my old PC. It’s a i7 5930K. It’s definitely not supposed to work with Windows 11. But it works just fine after bypassing the hardware checks.
The checks seem to only occur when the installer is running.
Any source for hardware check bypass I haven’t had a need to dig for one until recently and am deeper into software engineering than reverse/bypass engineering.
Rufus integrates one, but its proprietary afaik
https://www.ghacks.net/2022/02/12/windows-11-how-to-bypass-tpm-checks-during-dynamic-updates/
The checks seem to only occur when the installer is running.
This is an important thing. If that is true, just using a currently working installer will even be future proof.
the perfect PC for graphic design.
But it is not supported by Win11, from 2017 probably no TPM etc. Its an Intel Xeon E3-1240 v6
Doubt that. That CPU is from 2011 not 2017. Not worth running in 2024.
I doubt that the hardware requirements for win11 will lead to much problems.
Ooh damn, then I must have read the wrong description. Thats a hell no then.
Well you’ve edited the original post, but the quote shows a v6 cpu with a link to a v1. Which do you have? V6 is kaby lake and while not officially supported, it does have tpm2.0
It is v6