TodayI tried getting Windows 11 to run on a Raspberry Pi 3 Model B using Tiny 11.After I downloaded Tiny 11, I downloaded and ran the Raspberry imager from
www.worproject.com and put it on a micro-SD card. I put the card in the Raspberry Pi and boot it up. It took around 10 minutes but eventually Windows turned on and asked me for the time zone and keyboard language and when I clicked next I saw this screen:
The tutorial used: -to/install-tiny11-for-arm64-on-raspberry-pi-4 I am aware that the tutorial is made for a Raspberry Pi 4 but I don't see why it wouldn't work with a Raspberry Pi 3 because it has all the requirements for Tiny 11 such as being ARM64.
BUT HERE COMES THE BIG BUT, i am not using tiny11 but something similar its called ghoste spectre, and just now i wasnt able to install the virtio-win drivers, please tell me if it was possible for you
Tiny11 b1 (b standing for beta) was released in February 2023 and has been a smashing success. However, it has been superseded by tiny11 core, having similar functionality while being based on the new 23H2 platform.
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The only issue i get is trying to update on Tiny 10 23H2 with the cumulative (KB5034122), it downloads, then install until getting 100% and before disapearing it prompts an error message (0x800f081f). Is a known issue? Have you made a performance comparison between Tiny 10 and Tiny 11 on x64 low specs PC?
Hi! It seems like this is quite a prevalent issue (although not everyone has it), but in the following days/week I will release a refreshed version of tiny10/11 that fixes this issue (or at least tries to)
hi ndtev i was going to install ur tiny11 2311 on my old 4th gen i3 desktop but saw ur twitter post that soon new tiny is
coming.as dorm bandwqidth is precious and costly wanted to get it installed from here.ihave about 36hours before i leave for dorm.so it would have been reqally helpfil if u could release the latest build sooner.thankkkkkkkkkkuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu man
Just a minor comment, i think tiny10 windows would be more useful if there was a version with Windows Store installed, so that we could at least Have the option to install other apps, like Photo viewer, calendar, etc.
Something similar to winpe 10 but that is installable and actually ends up without page file, without hybernate, without MicroSpam apps, just old school how Windows is supposed to be minus the Micro Monkey business they oppress us with. Also classic shell or worst case starts back.
The best thing ever. tiny10 helped my potato laptop run very smoothly. the best os for very old potato laptops or pc`s. but there was one problem: i tried intalling tiny11 on my potato laptop but i got BSoD with the error code of KERNEL_MODE_HEAP_CORRUPTION. I searched the internet it says your ram can be damaged or so and being caused by corrupted drivers. the way to fix it was to give windows more page drive and fix corrupted files. i tested the tiny11 in a virtual box and it worked totally fine. ill happy if someone can fix my problem. Thank you!
One of the various things that puts people off upgrading to Windows 11 is that the operating system has very particular system requirements. For someone looking to upgrade from Windows 7, for instance, it is likely that their hardware will not make the grade. There is an answer, however, in the form of tiny11.
Coming from the same team that was behind tiny10 -- NTDEV -- tiny11 is a majorly stripped-back, bare-bones version of Windows 11 Pro that dramatically lowers the system requirements. The operating system needs just 8GB of disk space and 2GB of RAM, and it does not require TPM (Trusted Platform Module) support. This sounds great, but there are a few caveats to keep in mind.
The developers say of tiny11: "After months of requests, tiny11 is finally here! Based off of Windows 11 Pro 22H2, tiny11 has everything you need for a comfortable computing experience without the bloat and clutter of a standard Windows installation. It just uses around 8GB of space compared to the 20+GB that a standard installation does. You can upgrade from Windows 10 and install it on unsupported devices".
2. While I can understand that installing modified versions of Windows can pose a security risk, I can assure you (and you can obviously check for yourself) that the image doesn't have anything from external sources added to it.
4. At its core, tiny11 is designed to bring new life to old computers, so I don't encourage installing it on PCs that support Windows 11 by default. This doesn't mean that I don't trust my product, but at one point the disadvantages outweigh the benefits.
5. This shouldn't be considered a "Windows without telemetry/spyware" image, but one that was designed to run on PCs that don't support the standard versions of Windows 11, in the same line that tiny10 did with Windows 10.
On Windows Weekly, Paul Thurrott chats with Richard Campbell and Mikah Sargent about NTDEV's tiny11 2311 project - a smaller Windows 11 install option with servicing capabilities. It is based on the 23H2 release and makes Windows less resource intensive.
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