Chosen Solution

How do bypass windows security to get my unspported windows 11 computer to get the latest update 22H2?It looks like more info is needed to help me out , I have done a good many hacks that are out there but they are all about 2 to 3 months old. So all I am asking is there more resent hacks that are less less a month old so I might try. because when I tried to do the other hacks they looked like they were going to work and downloading and all.It looks like it would make it to thre login screen and would black until press the power button. It would come with a message " undoing changes" then it go back working normal but not updated to 22h2.

The issue with the bypass of the security checks is that M$ lets you install security updates, but not feature packs – you need to reinstall with the media creation tool, or if that fails bootable media with the CPU/TPM bypass applied in Rufus. Sadly, the only way around this problem for the foreseeable future is to get a supported CPU (8th gen Intel, Ryzen 3rd gen/some non-Ryzen chips). https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windowhttps://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/window… I ABSOLUTELY HATE TO SAY THIS but do what I did to get around their manufactured “problem”: Grab a machine with a 9th gen CPU or Ryzen 3000 chip (or at least a board+CPU combo that can take it but may come with an unsupported chip, but a BIOS update may be required to go to upgrade), BUT you may need to swap the whimpy 275-300W unit HP used in these. The p7 chassis is a normal mATX chassis (even the power supply is standard) so you can technically drop it in, but you will need to mess with the FP wiring for the power button or get a basic case like a Thermaltake without a window. If you want to reuse some parts then pull what you can from the p7. Yes, it involves new hardware but meeting the bare minimum CPU generation is a way to cheaply fix it, while sticking it to them for manufacturing a problem they didn’t have to. Due to gamers upgrade cycles the supported boards and processors are cheap now, especially if you buy a board and CPU as a pair and source things like DDR4 and NVMe SSDs new. That’s how I did it - i5 9400f/256GB NVMe boot drive/reused 1TB HD/spare GPU (f=no IGP). RAM and SSD were new, as well as my case and power supply. I did not bother moving the optical drive over as I never use it enough to care due to how Dell makes you remove 2 panels to swap it.