reinventing the round edges and other aspects of previous windows systems, lol funny stuff, but with all that telemetry and privacy concerning crap kinda dont care.
how to we get enterprise edition as this is consumer iso not business is this done via upgrade if the user is already on enterprise
I had a almost unknown brand 1st gen intel core i5 gen laptop that had nothing more than Win7 drivers, but it was running up to win10. I dont see why they would necessarily break them in win11. Plus its not even the build were supposed to get at Jun.24 (which should be build 2200.4 as microsoft internal servers say), so its not going to have its kernel bumped, at least not for now And to make people force-update to Win11 they will most likely use the same tactic they used at Win10, reuse the old Win8-8.1 and Win7 keys and now in this case, the Win10 keys.
4-5 pages ago we said a lot of workarrounds. But in short, these are the working ones: 1- Use 21390 or 19043 ISO and swap the .wim files. 2- Swap appraiserres.dll in the Sources folder with one from 21390 or 19043 ISO. 3- DISM 4- Just do a clean install.
By set-edition Home to Enterprise offline. Online: https://forums.mydigitallife.net/th...c-20h1-vb_release.80763/page-157#post-1601562
i don't see any relation with a build of Windows to your fans, or maybe the CPU utilization is higher?
how can we disable windows dashboard? I always accidentally have it come up from the left side of the screen, and I use a local account anyways
how to tell if your pc has tpm 2.0 on it To open it, press Windows+R to open a run dialog window. Type tpm. msc into it and press Enter to launch the tool. If you see information about the TPM in the PC—including a message at the bottom right corner of the window informing you which TPM specification version your chip supports—your PC does have a TPM