Microsoft has removed a support document from 2021 that taught users how to bypass the Windows 11 hardware requirements.
A popular method for bypassing the Windows 11 TPM/CPU hardware lock has been removed from official support pages.
According to the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine, it looks like Microsoft removed the workaround from the support page in ...
It appears that Microsoft doesn't want you to use the bypass any longer. Neowin spotted an update to a Microsoft support page ...
A support document on Microsoft's website no longer details how to install Windows 11 on unsupported hardware, but here are ...
The Windows 11 installation can bypass TPM requirement by modifying a specific policy. Microsoft recommended it, but then it ...
Windows 11 Pro isn’t just for tech enthusiasts. It’s a smart choice for anyone looking for a stable, powerful, and ...
You'll upgrade that aging piece of kit and you'll like it For the past three years, Microsoft documented a way to run Windows ...
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.
Microsoft has been caught scrubbing its own documentation outlining a process users could take to install Windows 11 on an ...
Microsoft has quietly removed its official instructions for installing Windows 11 on unsupported Windows 10 machines.
Microsoft removed its guide to installing Windows 11 on devices that don't pass the TPM 2.0 check by default, bypassed with registry editing.