Lmao, I’ll be on w10 till they release a not-shit OS again 😄
Comment on Microsoft Will Charge for Windows 10 Security Updates in 2025
Blackmist@feddit.uk 11 months ago
Gonna be a lot of unsecured PCs about then, thanks to that ridiculous TPM requirement.
tgxn@lemmy.tgxn.net 11 months ago
tias@discuss.tchncs.de 11 months ago
I’ve been a computer geek and programmer for 35 years. I’m the one my entire extended family and for help. I’m even consulted but the IT department at work.
And I have no idea how to get Windows 11 running on my home PC. It has a TPM but I have secure boot in BIOS set to “Other OS” because I dual boot with Linux. I’m not getting rid of Linux, that’s my daily driver. I just use Windows to play games. What does MS expect me to do exactly, get a second PC for Windows?
Thermal_shocked@lemmy.world 11 months ago
35 years? cmon man, use your brain then. Install win11 on USB with Rufus, check the box to bypass tpm requirements, install windows. You can force it on anything like any other os. I hate windows 11, but you’re being a little dense here.
xcjs@programming.dev 11 months ago
With his experience (and I agree if this is the case), he’s probably expecting issues with unsupported configurations of Windows 11.
I guarantee that at some point after Windows 10 support drops that Microsoft will start pushing features that require TPM functionality. Maybe it will be minor at first, like you can’t use PIN logins without it. Eventually it might move on to HTTPS requests failing without root certificates protected by a secure element store.
I’ve been a software developer for over a decade, and while I will never say always, usually unsupported configurations like this TPM workaround eventually fails.
mob@sopuli.xyz 11 months ago
Thermal_shocked@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Nah you’re a prodigy
Tsuroth@lemmy.world 11 months ago
If you currently have a Windows 10 machine, you can use NT Lite to edit the win11 iso. You can remove some of the bloatware, turn off some of the annoying features, and disable the tpm and secure boot requirements entirely.
Blackmist@feddit.uk 11 months ago
Yeah, pretty sure that’s what stopped mine upgrading as well. I’m not messing with the boot settings, because I don’t want a machine that suddenly can’t boot.
prole@sh.itjust.works 11 months ago
Dunno which games you play, but Proton is incredible these days, and you can play just about anything with it (Protondb will give you an idea).
In fact, there have been several cases where the Windows version of a game with Proton plays better than the native Linux runtime for the same game.