Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Loading...
Close Menu
  • Biology
  • Chemistry
  • Earth
  • Health
  • Physics
  • Science
  • Space
  • Technology
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram

Quantumis

  • Biology
  • Chemistry
  • Earth
  • Health
  • Physics
  • Science
  • Space
  • Technology
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube
Quantumis
Home » » Windows 11: Microsoft sticks to system requirements, despite sluggish conversion

Windows 11: Microsoft sticks to system requirements, despite sluggish conversion

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Reddit
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email Reddit

Microsoft released Windows 11 in 2021 as the successor of Windows 10. Unlike previous Windows systems, Windows 11 came with an updated set of system requirements.

Main requirements included a relatively modern CPU and support for TPM 2.0. PCs that did not meet the requirements could not be upgraded to Windows 11 using Windows Update.

While Microsoft introduced bypasses to install Windows 11 on devices that do not meet the system requirements, it warned users of the consequences. PCs that do not meet the system requirements of Windows 11 are not entitled to receive updates, according to Microsoft.

While cumulative updates have installed fine on unsupported Windows 11 machines up until now, the same cannot be said for new feature updates.

This year, Microsoft did block one method of installing the operating system on unsupported hardware. It prevented the installation of Windows 11, version 24H2, on very old systems as well, even though previous versions installed just fine.

Slow conversion

Third-party statistics service StatCounter observes traffic on more than 1.5 million websites. The company sees Windows 10 leading the field when it comes to Windows PCs.

Windows 10 has a usage share of more than 61 percent as of November 2024. Windows 11 follows in second place with a share of around 35 percent.

Windows 10 loses about a percentage per month and Windows 11 gains that percentage. With eleven months of support left for Windows 10, it is clear that conversions need to accelerate to even make it past Windows 10 until October 2025.

Millions of PCs won't be upgraded to Windows 11 or replaced by a Windows 11 device by October 2025. That leaves these customers without support, unless they plan to purchase extended security updates.

Microsoft is making them available to home users, businesses, and Enterprise customers for the first time. Home users may subscribe for a single year of update extensions, whereas business and Enterprise customers get the option to extend by three years.

System requirements are here to stay

Microsoft could reduce the pressure on its customers and do something for the environment, if it would change the system requirements of Windows 11.

At least one requirement is non-negotiable, according to Microsoft. Microsoft employee Steven Hosking explains in a long blog post on the company's Windows IT Pro Blog that TPM 2.0 is essential for Windows 11.

The trusted platform module is used for cryptographic operations and also storage. Devices that do not support it are blocked from upgrading, but there are ways around this as mentioned above.

With Microsoft putting its foot on the ground, the only other potential lever left is the processor. It would allow systems with TPM and a not-so-recent processor to upgrade to Windows 11.

Closing Words

While it seems doubtful that Microsoft is relaxing the requirements, outside pressure could force Microsoft's hand.

More than 100 million incompatible systems and customers could potentially be lost in October 2025, if Microsoft decides to play hardball and customers decide not to replace their perfectly-fine PC with a new one.

Windows 10 users have some options besides upgrading to Windows 11.

Do you use a PC with Windows 10 or earlier versions of Windows? What are your plans going forward? Feel free to leave a comment down below.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit

Related Articles

Here is why App Updates from Google Play may feel like they install faster now

If you run an old version of Windows 11, Microsoft may force-upgrade your system

Google Search adds links to archived webpages from Internet Archive's Wayback Machine

Keyzing: a reference when buying software online

Adobe will disable Adobe Elements 2025 three years after purchase

HDMI 2.2 to be unveiled at CES 2025 - requires new HDMI cable

ChatGPT Search is now available for free users

Windows Control Panel unexpectedly says that some BitLocker settings are managed by your administrator

A look at Firefox's improved Profiles Manager that just launched

Meet UI-TARS: The Open-Source AI Agent Taking Tech by Storm

Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Trending News

Print AI: HP injects AI into its printers

Stellar Data Recovery Professional is the tool you need for Business Data Recovery

iOS 18.0.1 fixes iPhone touch screen problems and performance issues

Google Chrome will display performance issue alerts when a tab is using a lot of resources

FlyBy11: update introduces more Windows 11 installation options and plugins

Tape Storage Technology: Managing Archival Integrity and Data Recovery Challenges

The revised Recall on Windows 11 is still recording information that it should not

How to rebuild the icon cache in Windows 11

Microsoft changes account sign-in system to keep users logged in automatically

Perplexity Launches extension of free AI App on Google Play Store

Follow Quantumis
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Pinterest
SciTech News
  • Biology News
  • Chemistry News
  • Earth News
  • Health News
  • Physics News
  • Science News
  • Space News
  • Technology News
Recent Posts
  • Microsoft may finally be removing the Windows Control Panel
  • Windows 10 Start Menu will soon display ads for Microsoft 365
  • Adobe will disable Adobe Elements 2025 three years after purchase
  • eM Client acquires Postbox and ends its development
  • Overwhelmed by Your Inbox? Here’s How to Reclaim Control
  • Tape Storage Technology: Managing Archival Integrity and Data Recovery Challenges
Copyright © 2025 Quantumis. All Rights Reserved.
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use