Appletax
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 394
- Location
- Northern Michigan
Solution: stick with Win 10 or recommend upgrading to a refurbished PC that supports Win 11 if they do not want to pay for a new PC.
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There are clients that are not interested in upgrading to a Windows 11 compatible PC. Recently, a client had me repair and upgrade their Win 10 laptop. They didn't want to spend the extra money to upgrade. They might get a new laptop sometime after Win 10 support ends (I recommended ideally upgrading around mid-2026 at the latest).
Went from 4GB RAM to 12GB, replaced the HDD with an SSD, and nuked and paved Win 10. I thought about offering them a choice of Win 10 or Win 11 altered by Rufus to eliminate that TPM and security requirements. I did not offer this choice because it has a slower processor that probably would not work as well with Win 11.
On another thread of mine on here, I was asked why I installed Win 10 on another laptop.
If I offered to install Rufus Win 11, I would let the client know the pros and cons. Pros: can potentially have much longer support for Windows and programs. Cons: Microsoft may eventually decide to block incompatible Win 11 PCs from receiving updates, which might be fixable by nuking and paving using the newest version. Not sure if they would be so nasty as to totally disable Win 11.
What are your thoughts? What do you do?
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There are clients that are not interested in upgrading to a Windows 11 compatible PC. Recently, a client had me repair and upgrade their Win 10 laptop. They didn't want to spend the extra money to upgrade. They might get a new laptop sometime after Win 10 support ends (I recommended ideally upgrading around mid-2026 at the latest).
Went from 4GB RAM to 12GB, replaced the HDD with an SSD, and nuked and paved Win 10. I thought about offering them a choice of Win 10 or Win 11 altered by Rufus to eliminate that TPM and security requirements. I did not offer this choice because it has a slower processor that probably would not work as well with Win 11.
On another thread of mine on here, I was asked why I installed Win 10 on another laptop.
If I offered to install Rufus Win 11, I would let the client know the pros and cons. Pros: can potentially have much longer support for Windows and programs. Cons: Microsoft may eventually decide to block incompatible Win 11 PCs from receiving updates, which might be fixable by nuking and paving using the newest version. Not sure if they would be so nasty as to totally disable Win 11.
What are your thoughts? What do you do?
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