A support page no longer describes the Registry hack that lets you bypass Windows 11's TPM requirements. But you still have options for sneaking past the hardware restrictions.
This included removing all mention of how users can modify their Windows 10’s registry, letting them install Windows 11 —so ...
A support document on Microsoft's website no longer details how to install Windows 11 on unsupported hardware, but here are ...
Up until recently, Microsoft used to tell users about a registry key modification that can bypass TPM checks and install Windows 11 on an 'unsupported' PC. That method has since been removed from ...
Microsoft has quietly deleted its official instructions on how to install Windows 11 on an unsupported Windows 10 machine. The company originally posted the instructions in an October 2021 ...
In the first instance of Microsoft stopping people performing unsupported upgrades, Neowin spotted that the company had ...
Microsoft has quietly updated its support documentation to remove the Windows Registry code that allowed you to install Windows 11 on unsupported Windows 10 PCs. In a statement to Windows Latest ...
However, folks over at Neowin captured the support page and archived it. The solution is to open the Registry Key, and modify a certain policy, then install Windows 11 on the preferred device, even if ...
Microsoft tightened that loophole back in August 2024, after which it was still possible to use it through third-party apps ...