Microsoft accidentally allowed unsupported PCs to upgrade to Windows 11 22H2

Windows 11 running on an old Windows 7-era HP laptop.

Enlarge / Windows 11 running on an old Windows 7-era HP laptop. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

Microsoft began offering the Windows 11 22H2 update to Windows Insiders in the Release Preview channel earlier this week. But the update didn't just go to people who were supposed to get it—it was also released to many PCs that don't meet Windows 11's stringent new system requirements.

As reported by Neowin, users on Reddit and Twitter whose unsupported Windows 10 PCs were signed up for the Release Preview channel were shown notifications that the Windows 11 22H2 update was available and that their PCs suddenly met the requirements to install it. This raised the possibility that Microsoft could be relaxing the system requirements for Windows 11, but the Windows Insider Program Twitter account confirmed yesterday that the notifications were due to a bug and that the requirements were not changing.

Windows 11 generally requires an 8th-generation Intel Core CPU or AMD Ryzen 3000-series CPU or better, as well as Secure Boot support and TPM 2.0 for handling disk encryption and other security functions. PCs made and sold in late 2017 into 2018 can usually run the OS, while older PCs generally can't. Microsoft argues that these newer PCs will run Windows 11 more reliably and that they support security features that older PCs don't, though the cutoffs are still somewhat arbitrary.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments



https://ift.tt/ZboQ6mc

Comments