Correct, is in the BT~sources\sources folder of the "Windows-old folder", and nowhere in the new installed W11.
Not a discussion, just an observation, sorry if I bothered you, I thougth I had a missing DLL. Great tool anyway, thanks
One could split hairs and state a Discussion is "a meaningful exchange of ideas by all parties" while a Conversation is "just talking to some-one else".
I guess the question is not dumb at all; as the file is not kept in the installation, at least that one cannot be used to re-check requirements periodically. Of course, there are plenty of other ways available to them. Someone remember XP Starter? It periodically re-checked parameters and if the hardware exceeded them, bailed out.
First and foremost, thanx for OPs for making this workaround. Refering to quote, the answer is simple as it has to be. Those ding dongs, despite their initial fun, have to have as low os fragmentation as its possible. They will low these "idiotic" requirements in time, as they have to. Again thanx for OPs hard work.
In fact this is what I did, on the same disk of windows 10, I created a new empty partition where I install clean win11, but the result is the one described above, using BypassTPMCheck & SecureBoot.txt during the installation. Any suggestions? Thanks
Code: [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\Setup\LabConfig] "BypassTPMCheck"=dword:00000001 "BypassSecureBootCheck"=dword:00000001 "BypassRAMCheck"=dword:00000001 These are meant to be applied to boot.wim index 2 for clean installs from boot scenarios.
Could it be possible to add the "official" MS reg file to bypass the TPM and CPU checking instead of the prior 4 reg files?
Why? To have less bypasses? And, afaik. that is for upgrades to be set on the install to be upgraded, not to be applied to the ISO you use to upgrade with.
oh, i see... completely misunderstood the use of that official bypass checking thanks for clarification!
https://forums.mydigitallife.net/th...fications-overview.83744/page-13#post-1677184 Here is the reg file.