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Повідомити про проблему з перекладом
Yeah, I didn't even enable it. The manufacturer did.
Also, I went into the BIOS setting and turned off Intel Platform Trust Technology which i assumed Intel's way of saying TPM. I booted back to Windows 10 and resumed the update. But, it still attempted to download Windows 11 for some reason. I've checked tpm.msc and it said "Compatible TPM cannot be found". What the hell?
I'm not sure if this is an effect of Windows thinking I have TPM and then I don't? I'm not sure.
It's possible the update was queued when it thought you had a TPM and isn't being removed from the queue since you turned it off. I'm not quite sure how you "reset" Windows Update in that situation though.
It should work though, it let me hold back the Windows 11 update on one of my machines for something like a year. In fact, I had to use the command line to force Windows Update to acknowledge the TPM when I finally decided to upgrade (it's supposed to eventually happen on its own, but I didn't want to wait).
It did got queued before I disabled TPM. I think the only way to get rid of the update is to install the update and then roll back to Windows 10. Because that's what I used to do in order to make the Windows Update shut up for a short time. So I'll probably do that now.
Thanks to the people that helped me!
I understand not all defaults are the best and thus; CHECK EVERYTHING.
I see many Motherboards coming with a CPU OC as a default preset; shame on them for doing such a thing.
Now boot into Win10, with ethernet/wifi disabled or disconnected.
Then disable WU or wipe the WU Queue and Download Cache.
Then reboot and re-enable Ethernet/WiFi
Because I don't really care much about TPM. Plus, I used to have Windows 11 on this thing before downgrading to the factory's default. I don't really care if the TPM's on or off until the ♥♥♥♥♥♥ update comes on. I don't actually have this problem before going to the Release Preview channel, and it just did that. So yeah.
To do this with GPE:
Keep an eye out for big updates however, because this will lock you into 22H2 even if 22H3 is released.
OP mentions being in Insider Preview which Microsoft may be sunsetting for Windows 10 even in the Release Preview tier.
How?
None of the WinOS Home Editions have BitLocker. That is a feature only available to editions such as Pro, Business, Enterprise