britechguy Well-known member Joined Jun 2, 2016 Posts 772 Location Staunton, VA Jun 29, 2021 #1 As I predicted (well, I wouldn't even call it a prediction, it's really a foregone conclusion), with Windows 11 at this stage of the game we may have one thing one minute, and another the next. Two articles, the second of which appeared hot on the heals of the first, on BleepingComputer that demonstrate this: Windows 11 preview build 22000.51 released - here's how to downloadWindows 11 preview build installs failing due to system requirements
As I predicted (well, I wouldn't even call it a prediction, it's really a foregone conclusion), with Windows 11 at this stage of the game we may have one thing one minute, and another the next. Two articles, the second of which appeared hot on the heals of the first, on BleepingComputer that demonstrate this: Windows 11 preview build 22000.51 released - here's how to downloadWindows 11 preview build installs failing due to system requirements
xrobwx71 Administrator Staff member Joined Sep 27, 2019 Posts 2,627 Location Panama City Beach, FL Jun 29, 2021 #2 I knew it as soon as I saw the limitations. There is no way they would "filter" out that many machines. Market share = Users, Users = ad dollars and data. Give it a few weeks, you'll be able to install Windows 11 on an Atari 2600. /j
I knew it as soon as I saw the limitations. There is no way they would "filter" out that many machines. Market share = Users, Users = ad dollars and data. Give it a few weeks, you'll be able to install Windows 11 on an Atari 2600. /j
britechguy Well-known member Joined Jun 2, 2016 Posts 772 Location Staunton, VA Jun 29, 2021 #3 @xrobwx71, I agree with you, on the whole, about the probabilities. But, and it's an important but, Windows 10 is not going away. It is still in support until 2025, so there would be no real mass exodus from the Windows ecosystem. I am trying to decide whether this is an intentional move to "cull the supported hardware herd" under Windows 11 specifically. By the time Windows 10 goes out of support (and we all know the 2025 date could easily be extended) there's not going to be a whole lot of active hardware that wouldn't meet the current floor specs for Windows 11. Time will tell!
@xrobwx71, I agree with you, on the whole, about the probabilities. But, and it's an important but, Windows 10 is not going away. It is still in support until 2025, so there would be no real mass exodus from the Windows ecosystem. I am trying to decide whether this is an intentional move to "cull the supported hardware herd" under Windows 11 specifically. By the time Windows 10 goes out of support (and we all know the 2025 date could easily be extended) there's not going to be a whole lot of active hardware that wouldn't meet the current floor specs for Windows 11. Time will tell!