I'm running Windows 11 on a 3990x and will probably be dual-booting Windows 10 21H2 shortly. What do you think the best practice is for selecting a power plan for each OS? I've seen conflicting posts on Reddit that talked about how Windows 10 21H1 fixed the default power plan for AMD and made the chipset power plans unnecessary, but is there still a difference?
Added Media Content info: https://forums.mydigitallife.net/th...hannel-co_release.83722/page-270#post-1692367
install.wim. Info: https://forums.mydigitallife.net/th...hannel-co_release.83722/page-270#post-1692367
CRC32: 672BFFBD MD5: E8AAA901F922622C10E462B6003B2C7A SHA-1: 849971BA1DDEF294BE2A79233EDCF56B4E6991B0 SHA-256: 667BD113A4DEB717BC49251E7BDC9F09C2DB4577481DDFBCE376436BEB9D1D2F Can anyone confirm for English x64, please?
Thank you. I will let you know if reflect drivers method with Veracrypt driver works with upgrade from Win 10 20H2 first and 21H1 second
You can download them from the 22000.194 IP Techbench SVF(SFX) repo: https://forums.mydigitallife.net/threads/windows-11-svf-repository.83748/#post-1692566 If your language is not present, wait for the MVS Releases. All business ESDs are available in the Win 11 ESD Repo too: https://forums.mydigitallife.net/threads/windows-11-esd-repository.83747/#post-1693559
Yep, check the win 11 ESD Repo: https://forums.mydigitallife.net/threads/windows-11-esd-repository.83747/#post-1693559
Probably best to talk to someone who knows more about that kind of stuff tbh, my knowledge in the area is limited. I would recommend though the Windows "balanced" power plan over installing the chipset drivers for Windows 10. Reason being it could conflict when you do eventually use the Windows 11 driver / power plan. Windows 11 by default probably already comes with the latest chipset driver minus power plan. So just wait it out a week for AMD to officially update power plan/driver package. Your system will run fine just might overvolt, not hit higher frequency's, stay pegged high etc etc but it will be fine for a bit till the update hits. I know the BIOS updates do some funky stuff also to resolve the past issues im not sure if it was enough though its really not my area of expertise or worry im just a dude who remembers questioning why my 3800x was stuck at 1.45v on release.
fresh installed 22000.194 iso from insiders a week ago so i am all good it was rtm no need to redo with Win11_English_x64.iso both same isos
Given that we only have a day until the official announcement, it doesn't make much sense for them to host all of these files on extra servers unless they planned on needing the extra bandwidth and were intending on using them as the final version for release. While there is still time for that to change, I gotta say that at this late of an hour given this move it seems unlikely. What might seem like a few computers to us is probably a whole data center to them. You just don't use those kind of resources if you aren't planning on needing them. Well, so far they definitely have subverted my expectations for a new OS release, but not in a good way. I'll still try to remain at least partially neutral until I give it a more proper testing.