bobsterlobster 4 days ago

Yeah, until microsoft says "Sup there lil buddy? Running an unsupported system? Oof. The next update is gonna really turn it inside-out"

  • jjkaczor 4 days ago

    This is exactly my experience - I have a Lenovo W530 from 2013, it has an i7, 32gb RAM and SSDs (RAID0 for performance, backups are off-device) - and it is STILL lightning fast.

    However - EVERY single trick I have tried... the above command, LTSC, Enterprise edition, etc, results in a situation where after installation a few days (or hours) and some updates get installed, and... blue-screen-of-death on every boot.

    Gave up, installed Linux - still working through some issues (GPU driver compatibility), but overall it is a much better experience...

  • jterrys 4 days ago

    I think at a certain point you need to just call it quits with that sort of bullshit. I have my dignity. I'm a fucking grown adult. I'm not going to spend my spare time haplessly looking online to unfuck the new current set of fuckery. Just take the fucking bullet. Learn linux. Congrats you're playing whack-a-mole with a trillion dollar corporation and prolonging your misery. This is stupid.

    • thewebguyd 4 days ago

      Yeah, microsoft will never change otherwise. People and companies continue to willingly allow themselves to get abused, and then wonder why Microsoft never changes and continues to abuse them.

      So long as said abuse never results in a loss of marketshare and revenue, it will continue. Why would they stop if there's no negative repercussions?

  • billfor 4 days ago

    Take backups and disable the updates with group policy. OP just wanted to install Windows 11.

    • a_victorp 4 days ago

      Just stay at windows 10 at this point. The whole point of upgrading to 11 is to not stay on an unsupported OS

    • HumblyTossed 4 days ago

      Seriously, if people are willing to learn all this, they can easily learn Linux and simply tell the corporate overlords to fuck right off.

  • stronglikedan 4 days ago

    Well that's never happened before (with Windows anyway), so it's not likely to happen now.

    • Paianni 4 days ago

      It's happened at least three times:

      Win8.1 x64 required double-width compare and exchange instruction support, so people who bought Win8 for a CPU or motherboard that didn't support it had to downgrade to the 32-bit version or lose support in 2016.

      Win7 updates from 2018 onwards required SSE2 with no warning.

      Win11 24H2 and later won't install on x86 processors that don't support the x86-64-v2 baseline.

    • Joe_Cool 4 days ago

      Has happened:

      Core2Duo, Opteron64 and Athlon64 can run W11 RTM

      They will bluescreen booting after an update to 24H2 because they are missing the POPCNT instruction.

      https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/02/windows-11-24h2-goes...

      • dist-epoch 4 days ago

        Athlon 64 is a 20 yo CPU. At some point...

        • MarsIronPI 4 days ago

          Hey, my X200 has a Core2Duo and still does everything I need.

          (No, I don't need gaming or LLMs.)

    • abracadaniel 4 days ago

      From my experience it seems to happen all the time. Settings reset, uninstalled apps reinstalled, firewall settings erased. I went looking for the Windows 10 patch that deleted the Documents folder if you had remapped it to another drive, and it was hard to find an article due to all the other times their updates have also deleted people's Documents folder. This was the first time I recall it happening: https://www.engadget.com/2018-10-09-windows-10-october-updat...

1vuio0pswjnm7 4 days ago

Where can one read the source code of setup.exe

That's, e.g., how I would determine what these commands do

I have had HN replies in the past that argued Windows is open source and thus comparable to UNIX-like OS projects where _the public_ can read the source code and make modifications, _for free_

Absent the source code, we can read Microsoft's documentation

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/manufactu...

It seems like WinPE is the most useful version of Windows, e.g., it allows more options to setup.exe

How does one quickly and easily download and install a copy of WinPE, preferably on removable media

hackeman300 4 days ago

What's this?

  • epistasis 4 days ago

    Whenever I see an unexplained command I don't understand from a random internet forum, I hop onto the production server and run it, just in case it might boost performance. Wouldn't want to miss out on that.

    Been doing it since I was 12. It taught me all about the ins and outs of `rm`.

    • jimt1234 4 days ago

      Sounds like me back in the early 80s when I used to war dial, and people used to share "active" prefixes. I learned all about the 911 prefix when I set my dialer and went to sleep. About 20 minutes later the cops were banging on my front door. True story; I was in 6th grade, got arrested for it.

      • deepriverfish 4 days ago

        wow did you get a record? this is some Hackers(1995) vibe stuff

    • prerok 4 days ago

      Reminds me of that story from an IRC channel:

      A: I have a program that will format your hard drive. I just need your IP.

      B: Ok, it's 127.0.0.1

      A: Ahahaha, it 56% now! Lol.

      A left the chat. Connection reset by peer.

  • Someone1234 4 days ago

    A work-around to install on unsupported hardware which both works, but is unsupported and could break during a feature Windows Update.

  • bunderbunder 4 days ago

    A clever way to maximize the chances that your computer gets bricked on a future Patch Tuesday.

    • jama211 4 days ago

      It’s really not

      • bunderbunder 4 days ago

        Some of the checks are around CPU features that they don’t currently use but may use in the future. And CPUs don’t typically respond super gracefully to being asked to execute instructions they don’t understand.

        • jama211 3 days ago

          I’ll bet you $100 my supposedly unsupported cpu is never kicked off of windows 11. There’s just no chance.