Re: Win 11 on a 10 year old Dell Inspiron (Was Re: Running W…

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Author: Keith Smith via PLUG-discuss
Date:  
To: Main PLUG discussion list
CC: techlists
Subject: Re: Win 11 on a 10 year old Dell Inspiron (Was Re: Running Win10 after end of life)
Thanks!!

On 2025-05-12 23:03, mike/r via PLUG-discuss wrote:
> It appears support for Microsoft 365 on Win10 was extended for 3
> years, but the OS itself will only have paid support after Oct 2025.
>
> https://www.laptopmag.com/laptops/windows-laptops/windows-10-end-of-support-app-extension
>
> On 5/12/25 10:17 PM, Keith Smith via PLUG-discuss wrote:
>
>> I gt news on my Android phone. I think it is tailored to me. Today
>> there was an article that said M$ will support Win10 for 3 more
>> years. Could not confirm.
>>
>> To keep this on track with Linux I am hoping to replace W10 with
>> Linux at some point.
>>
>> On 2025-05-12 16:55, Arun Khan via PLUG-discuss wrote:
>> Apologies - I know this is a Linux forum but this Win 10 thread has
>> been meandering like the Mississippi 😗
>>
>> I hope this post is helpful to those who are pondering Windows 11
>> upgrade on older hardware and are not sure how to go about it.
>>
>> On Sat, May 10, 2025 at 12:59 PM David Schwartz via PLUG-discuss
>> <> wrote:
>>
>> AFAIK, if you have Win 10 installed, there has always been a way to
>> go in and have it upgrade your machine to Win 11 once it was
>> released at no cost.
>>
>> I think that started after they had so much trouble getting people
>> to move off of Win7.
>>
>> The problem is that Win 11 requires something in the hardware that
>> tells Win 11 it can run. I’ve got two machines running Win 10 that
>>
>> refuse to upgrade to Win 11. Paying for it won’t help.
>>
>> Not necessarily. You don't need the TPM hardware nor do you need to
>> pay (see notes)
>>
>> You CAN buy an upgrade if you want. I’m sure they’ll happily
>> take your money.
>>
>> To my knowledge, the upgrade is free if you have a lic. copy of Win
>> 7,
>> 8.x, 10
>>
>> <my story>
>>
>> I have a 10 year old Dell Inspiron laptop; it does not meet the min.
>>
>> Win 11 hardware requirement.
>> It has dual boot Linux Mint (c 2021) and a minimalist Windows 7 Home
>>
>> OEM (upgraded to Win 10 Pro)
>> Hardware profile - Intel Core i7-5500U, 8GB RAM, WDC 1TB HDD, Intel
>> WiFi DualBand AC 7265, FHD Touch Screen, NO TPM 2.0
>>
>> I decided to donate it to someone who needs it more than I do.
>> Even though the Linux desktop is easy to navigate, the person is
>> familiar with Windows and knows its software update process.
>> I don't want to hand him a laptop with a soon to be EOL OS.
>>
>> So I tried a fresh install of Windows 11 on it before donating it.
>>
>> Last Friday (5/9), I installed a fresh copy of Windows 11 (AMD64)
>> [notes]
>> Surprisingly, I did not have to search/install any device drivers.
>> Every device worked "out of the box" at first boot! Yay 🙌
>> Looks like Windows 11 installation media had all the drivers for
>> this
>> laptop because the hardware is so old 😁
>>
>> Now the laptop is ready for the next owner 🖖
>>
>> Conclusion: it is *possible* to install Win 11 on older hardware.
>>
>> </my story>
>>
>> [notes]
>>
>> * Win 10 licenses are eligible for free upgrade to Win 11. Make
>> sure
>> you have the Product Key/Digital Lic (see below) prior to the
>> install
>> process.
>> * Download Win 11 ISO from here [1]
>> * Windows Product Key instructions here [2]
>> * A blank 8GB USB pen drive.
>>
>> * Visit Rufus website [3] and follow the instructions on how to
>> create Win 11 installation media from the ISO (disabling the TPM
>> hardware check).
>> Don't want to use Rufus - use this Registry hack [4] to bypass
>> Hardware checks during the install process.    * Create the USB
>> installation media
>> * Boot your computer from the above USB media
>> * Do NOT connect it to your network (WiFi or LAN)
>> * Follow the on screen instructions to complete the
>> installation. It
>> may nag you for a Microsoft account, choose 'local.'  It took about
>> 40
>> mins. for the installation to complete.  YMMV depending on your
>> hardware vintage.

>>
>> * The Win 11 installation is minimal (35GB), it creates a
>> default
>> 'admin' user; it will prompt you to set the password at first login.
>>
>> In my case it detected the original Win 7 Home lic. and defaulted
>> the
>> install to Win 11 Home but I could upgrade it to Win 11 Pro with my
>> Win 10 Digital Licw.
>>
>> --
>> Arun Khan
>>
>> Links:
>> ------
>> [1] https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/software-download/windows11
>> [2]
>>
> https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/find-your-windows-product-key-aaa2bf69-7b2b-9f13-f581-a806abf0a886
>> [3] https://rufus.ie/en/
>> [4]
>>
> https://www.tomshardware.com/how-to/bypass-windows-11-tpm-requirement
>>
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