I don't know why people - myself included - have fallen for the Windows 11 craze. Windows 11 is an improvement of Windows Vista with a new Framework and modified Kernell - but still Vista. On the 24th we will watch the PR for the failed product and listen to another lie about the great future
i made fake ms account installed logged in and so far its fine. but i only ever use local account anyway on my own machines
It's at page 4 but i still have to upload the 1.3 version, will do that when i finished setting up a new pc for a friend: https://forums.mydigitallife.net/th...nel-co_release-leak.83658/page-4#post-1666239
Decided to finally give it a try. Kinda funny how my Window 10 install script/answer file worked perfectly with it.
I need help, i can't upgrade because it said i using diferent language (fr) how i can put langague pack fr inside iso ?
i have install it on other partitoin in fresh install before, and i have get languague pack fr, and is funny, i get franglais result lol French melanged to english ^^
My wife's computer (Toshiba Satellite 2008) was upgraded from Windows 10 to Windows 11, it had English US Windows Display Language with English, Irish, German, Turkish and Arabic. They are all working fine after the upgrade. I could not add another Windows Display Languages to another (Fresh install, not upgrade) computer (looks like not available). But I was able to add keyboards, alas with limited functionality. I would try installing en-US English Display Language, then upgrade. It might work
21996 Boot And Upgrade FiX KiT v1.3 https://forums.mydigitallife.net/th...nel-co_release-leak.83658/page-4#post-1666239 Code: New: The tool now can also create a mixed build ISO, Win 10 ISO with the 21996 wim/esd in. This will enable you to use the standard Win 10 setup when installing from boot. Added to the OP, section "Tools"
Don't think so. I did install Windows 11 in a Virtual Box using the Microsoft account. Nothing bad happened except that Windows 11 remained to be activated.
1. Windows NT 3.1 - was born way back in 1993, it already contained more than 4 million lines in C and C++. 2. Windows NT 3.5 was born a year later than its C++ brother, which we talked about earlier. The number of code lines reached 8 million. The clever reader may subtract from this number 4 million - to get the number by which the number of code lines grew during the year. 3. And now Windows NT 4.0, which appeared in 1996, with 11-12 million lines of code. 5. Windows XP - about 45 million lines. 6. Windows 10 - more than 60 million lines. Of which 10 million lines of Linux code. For that, Microsoft paid $100 million + bonuses a long time ago. Comparing the code of Windows Vista and Windows 11 for this I do not need to decompile the system, but it is enough to visually mark which are the improvements and which are not. And the performance itself. Can you try to fit 100 thousand files into a folder? That will never work. The folder can only hold up to 60,000 files and you will get a blue screen like BSDOS This shows that the code remains the same in Windows 11