Microsoft really, really, really doesn’t want you to upgrade your old Windows 10 PC to Windows 11. That’s the logic behind the strict hardware compatibility requirements the company imposed when it launched the new operating system in 2021. If you try to install Windows 11 on a computer with a CPU from 2018 or earlier, you get an error message, along with a suggestion that maybe you should buy a new PC.
The result is a thoroughly predictable chess game between Redmond and the Windows enthusiast community, with each new move raising the stakes. The owners of those “incompatible” PCs find ways to work around those restrictions, and Redmond finds a way to make those workarounds more difficult.
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With the public release of the most recent feature update to Windows 11, version 24H2, Microsoft tightened the compatibility checks that Windows Setup runs when performing an upgrade. Those new restrictions blocked one widely used workaround, which used the open-source Rufus utility to create installation media that allows Windows 11 upgrades on incompatible hardware.
The new restrictions lasted for less than one week, as the community discovered that you could work around Microsoft’s compatibility blocks by manually entering a series of commands to tweak the registry. And now the developer of Rufus, Pete Batard, has released a new beta version of the utility that automates that process. But the way it’s implemented might make some people nervous.
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On the surface, the Rufus 4.6 beta doesn’t look any different from its predecessor. When you select the option to bypass the Windows 11 hardware compatibility checks, it replaces the official Windows 11 compatibility appraiser, Appraiserres.dll, with a 0-byte file, just as the earlier version did; and it offers the same handful of additional customization options. To work around the 24H2 restrictions, though, it performs a few new tricks of its own.
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The most noteworthy change is that creating installation media renames the official Windows Setup program, Setup.exe, to Setup.dll and adds a new custom program called Setup.exe. It also adds an $OEM$ subfolder in the Sources folder, containing additional subfolders and one file.
Double-clicking the newly created Setup.exe file produces this permission dialog, which shows that the file is a Windows Setup Wrapper, signed by Akeo Consulting, which is the corporate parent of Rufus.