WHYbig old NOPE
The only real hardware requirements are in the microprocessor which now has to have certain hardware security circuits which prevent malware and aberrant programs from changing firmware and OS security memory locations without permission. All CPU's (both Intel and AMD) made after 2021 have these circuits.
@arrall have you had any issues related to your microsoft account? I keep getting random "there's a problem with your account" and a few widgets randomly freezing or not loading, it seems to be having hiccups on the first time I try to play with stuff, but then seemingly works afterwards (knock on wood)
just curious
Weird. I have 10 Pro on my gaming PC and 10 Home on my Media PC. Both seem to act exactly the same.Yep, that's Windows 10 home edition. The difference between Windows 10 on my personal PC and my work computer is tremendous.
Do you always buy a laptop? I mean if it’s just for home use, and your work laptop is what you take when you leave the house, there’s no reason your home computer can’t be a desktop. You get to have so much more control over literally every facet if you build a desktop vs buying a laptop. And they’re cheaper than ever for the quality you get these days. The major cost is usually the processor and graphics card but if you don’t need either to be super intense then you can really cut some costs.Maybe the computer just sucks. It ran well for like 2 weeks, and then got laggy and buggy and slow as fuck. I have literally only ever watched Netflix and Hulu on it, nothing else, so its not like I did some shit and got a virus. I definitely won't buy another computer with McAfee on it, for sure. I also from day have gotten random ads pop up like every 20 minutes.
I recently installed Win 11 pro on my wife's computer and created a local account by disconnecting the internet after final reboot. No custom ISO required.
So that method still works FWIW.
Most definitely, just pointing out a solution for those who do not have the desire or means to get a copy of an ISO.Still have to go through the setup flow, though. The way Rufus does it, it just installs and boots straight to desktop with your local account, no need to make any privacy decisions along the way
Most definitely, just pointing out a solution for those who do not have the desire or means to get a copy of an ISO.
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I make some custom ISOs at work, but we stick to Pro edition. I think Enterprise has more rigid licensing requirements but I haven't tried it personally. There are registry keys to disable telemetry and stuff, so that can easily be done post-installation. If you have an ISO then I'd recommend using Rufus to write it to media because that way you get prompted for checkboxes to control the setup flow (you can remove it entirely and have a local account created instead)