Quote:
Originally Posted by shawnhayes
"bypass" for windows 11. Please elaborate.
And I think I agree for Windows 10. Much better than windows 8.1
As far as cloning, you sure he's going to be able to save/move his data as easily as cloning a disc? I agree with you, fresh install and data copy is best, but if you have seven years of software installs (I'm sure he's "installed" something in seven years, that will now be "gone" with a fresh install) - a data copy and reinstall can be very labor intensive.
I see what we're all saying. But, I'll bet a clone and debug would be less labor intensive for this user.
Shawn
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windows 11 requires a HW TPM 2.0. My desktop being a 3rd gen intel doesn't have it, so to install windows 11, you need to do registry hack as follow. there are several ways to do this, just google 'how to bypass tpm windows 11 install'
https://www.tomshardware.com/how-to/...pm-requirement
it's easy job for me, but not so easy for tranquility, so for easy install, windows 10 would be his OS