[SOLVED] Windows 11 - Aveyo

AlbertAZ

Reputable
Oct 5, 2021
23
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4,515
I attempted to use its creation tool to install the Windows 11 official release to upgrade my Windows 10 Pro. Installation could not pass the TPM test. I checked the registry and confirmed that the appropriate register key with the appropriate value was created using the Aveyo bat file. It did pass the CPU test. Looks like Microsoft "fixed" the hack. Any suggestions. I hope I just need to fix something
 
Solution
I did check and I do not want to do a clean install
Why not just try the same with an upgrade? Boot your Win10, and start Setup.exe. Keep going until you reach the point of non-complicance, then just run regedit and make changes.
AND the producer of the video make it clear that he does not know if it will work with the final release (now current) of Windows 11.
I think that at this point even MS don't know whether they will let this work in the future... 😉
I attempted to use its creation tool to install the Windows 11 official release to upgrade my Windows 10 Pro. Installation could not pass the TPM test. I checked the registry and confirmed that the appropriate register key with the appropriate value was created using the Aveyo bat file. It did pass the CPU test. Looks like Microsoft "fixed" the hack. Any suggestions. I hope I just need to fix something
what are your specs?
 
The specs: Corsair Obsidean 750 Case, Corsair HX 750 PS, Gigabyte GA-Z97X-UD5H MB (no TPM module), Intel 4790X CPU, Gigabyte Radeon RX580 graphics card, G Skills 4 X 4 DDR 1600 ram modules, XPG SX8200 Pro 1TB SSD boot drive and 3 HHDs

After I asked my question I fired up my Dell Inspiron 3847 With an Intel I5 4440 CPU that I bought about 6 years and used my windows 11 installation USB and all went well on it. I got the warning that my computer did not qualify but I proceeded and now I have Windows 11 pro that computer.
 
The specs: Corsair Obsidean 750 Case, Corsair HX 750 PS, Gigabyte GA-Z97X-UD5H MB (no TPM module), Intel 4790X CPU, Gigabyte Radeon RX580 graphics card, G Skills 4 X 4 DDR 1600 ram modules, XPG SX8200 Pro 1TB SSD boot drive and 3 HHDs

After I asked my question I fired up my Dell Inspiron 3847 With an Intel I5 4440 CPU that I bought about 6 years and used my windows 11 installation USB and all went well on it. I got the warning that my computer did not qualify but I proceeded and now I have Windows 11 pro that computer.
"Intel 4790X CPU"

That CPU is far off the bottom of the supported list.
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/wi...pported/windows-11-supported-intel-processors

This will not work. At all. TPM or no.
 
The only way you bypass it is by moving the install.wim of windows 11 into windows 10 bootable drive , inside sources folder. It's not worth moving to windows 11 as if you play games, the anticheat will starting to stop launching the game if you do not have tpm and secure boot on.
 
Last edited:
Curses, foiled again. So this How to Bypass Windows 11's TPM Requirement and Upgrade from Windows 10 | Tom's Hardware (tomshardware.com)

"Fortunately, there is a simple way you can prevent the Windows Update or the Windows 11 installer from requiring TPM. A simple, open-source script called Universal MediaCreationTool by a user named Aveyo will bypass the TPM-checker and allow you to upgrade, using Microsoft's own installers. Below, we'll explain how to use it."

no longer works
The only way you bypass it is by moving the install.wim of windows 11 into windows 10 bootable drive , inside sources folder. It's not worth moving to windows 11 as if you play games, the anticheat will starting to stop launching the game if you do not have tpm and secure boot on.
.
 
You don't need any Avayo BS tools...
Check this guy' video, skip tp 7:05 mark. Got it clean installed on Z97 1150 board with anemic Pentium G3470 CPU.
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CH0bAeEm1Jw
I did check and I do not want to do a clean install although I acknowledge that it might also work doing just an upgrade AND the producer of the video make it clear that he does not know if it will work with the final release (now current) of Windows 11.
 
I did check and I do not want to do a clean install
Why not just try the same with an upgrade? Boot your Win10, and start Setup.exe. Keep going until you reach the point of non-complicance, then just run regedit and make changes.
AND the producer of the video make it clear that he does not know if it will work with the final release (now current) of Windows 11.
I think that at this point even MS don't know whether they will let this work in the future... 😉
 
Solution