How stable are Win11 hardware check bypasses?
How stable are Win11 hardware check bypasses?
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!
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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.
8 1 ReplyYeah I can’t imagine a quad core xeon that caps out at 32gb of DDR3 is perfect for anything at this point
Edit: Yeah that CPU is pretty far down this list
6 0 ReplyOoh damn, then I must have read the wrong description. Thats a hell no then.
2 0 ReplyWell 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
3 0 ReplyIt is v6
1 0 Reply