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Diamond Member
- May 6, 2012
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Question is, why do you need Windows 11 in the first place on those machines. Except for that rounded UI or smarter Multi Monitor support, I see little reason to upgrade. Windows 10 has mainstream support until 2025 plus 3 years of extended support. Plenty of time left. You'd really want a built-in TPM 2.0 module for Windows 11 to make sense in the security department.
It'll eventually be required. 2025 is only 3.5 years away. Considering how slowly desktop performance has crept upwards this isn't a very long time at all. That my 2008 i7-920 is still a perfectly viable machine for basic work really puts those 3.5 years in perspective. (Just for the record it runs 7, and will continue doing that no matter the cutoff date)
I certainly do not like MS suddenly pulling a stunt like this after promising "Windows will support a device for the lifetime of the device". Guess what MS, desktop systems can have very long lives. Not everyone uses the corporate 3-year-laptop model. Also suddenly and arbitrarily changing hardware requirements to require what has always been a specialist device with little relevance for consumer systems. Oh, you've mandated it since '16*? You should have made it a hard requirement back then, then. And clearly and unambiguously communicated that it would be required going forward.
*They tried making TPM a hard requirement with both Vista and then 8, but had to relent due to the backslash.
Do we have a source for that? All I know so far is in this article, which means that as of right now we have no idea on when Win 10 extended support ends.
Windows 10 Home and Pro - Microsoft Lifecycle | Microsoft Docs 2) 2019 LTSC Build support until 2029. Win10 is going to be the new Win7 (Chrome support ends on the 15th of Jan 2022). Get ready to retire Windows 7 machines folks.
Running the LTSC branch isn't really viable for most people.