Do you think it's wise to attempt the "requirements bypass" method for improving your computer?
Do you think it's wise to attempt the "requirements bypass" method for improving your computer?
Hello,
My setup includes:
Ryzen 5 3600
B450 .Aorus
16g DDR4 RAM
3060ti
Windows 10 (current update)
2020 Build.
I recently found out about a cmd trick that might help bypass the requirements. Windows claims my build doesn't meet the criteria because of TMP 2.0 and Secure Boot, which aren't enabled in my case. Is it advisable to skip upgrades altogether (as suggested by the community, not Microsoft) if I don't satisfy these conditions? Or should I still try to upgrade despite them being a problem?
These requirements seem manageable to work around, especially since I'm not using it heavily for work and have a backup drive for safety. It's just an experiment.
What do you think?
-Ron
Your CPU works well with Windows 11.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/window...processors
There’s no need to find alternative solutions to get by.
Turn on the required features and install the updates.
The most recent update. I tried turning on the TPM setting, but faced some problems with secure boot. It seems like a mental factor—Microsoft claims it doesn’t work together. I activated TPM, but when I turned on Secure Boot, Windows wouldn’t start. That made me think there was a bigger compatibility problem. The "bypass" feature seemed appealing after reading about it.
Do you know why Windows wouldn’t load after enabling Secure Boot?
Just checking if your boot drive uses MBR. I remember seeing a similar issue before; switching to GPT resolved it and secure boot functioned properly.