Navigation
Search
|
Microsoft Trims More CPUs From Windows 11 Compatibility List
Tuesday February 25, 2025. 02:40 AM , from Slashdot
![]() Intel's 11th-generation chips arrived in 2020 and were discontinued last year. It would be surprising, if not unheard of, for OEMs to build machines with unsupported chips. Intel has already transitioned many pre-11th generation chips to 'a legacy software support model,' so Microsoft's decision to omit the chips from the OEM list is understandable. However, this could be seen as a creeping problem. Chips made earlier than that were present very recently, in the list of supported Intel processors for Windows 11 22H2 and 23H2. This new OEM list may add to worries of some users looking at the general hardware compatibility specs for Windows 11 and wondering if the latest information means that even the slightly newer hardware in their org's fleet will soon no longer meet the requirements of Microsoft's flagship operating system. It's a good question, and the answer -- currently -- appears to be that those 'old' CPUs are still suitable. Microsoft has a list of hardware compatibility requirements that customers can check, and they have not changed much since the outcry when they were first published. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/25/02/24/2342219/microsoft-trims-more-cpus-from-windows-11-compa...
Related News |
25 sources
Current Date
Feb, Tue 25 - 07:59 CET
|