I found every youtuber talking about the difference missed one big feature: Pro version allows all display languages, whereas Home version only allows using one default language. It's a very important feature for multilingual users, I switch between English, Chinese and Japanese frequently.
Encryption & Sandbox options is one of the big things for me when it comes to Home vs Pro I recently got a upgrade key to upgrade my Windows 10 Home keep up the good work my man.
is that how when I was on the pro version I had encrypted DNS but now that i'm on home I can't? Or is there a setting I can change I can't remember if that's what I did previously.
Great overview of Home vs. Professional. My laptop used to have Windows Professional, but now it belongs to a relative. I'm now using Home. Until I saw this video, I didn't think there was much of a distinction between Pro and Home. But, thanks to you, I now understand that there are considerable gaps. Keep rocking with Windows 11!
I use Remote Desktop all the time at work. It's super duper handy for logging into servers without having to actually walk into the server room or anything. Actually one of my favorite features. I could see the potential for it being useful on a PC but I can't think of any real world examples I'd be using any time soon.
For me... I will wait until at least a year to allow for all the bug fixes, tweaks, and adjustments based upon consumer reaction to settle down. Thus far 11 does appear to have some nice features but it also has eliminated some features that I use regularly. I wish they would quit messing around with the start button and taskbar. My take... changes that are mostly a solution in search of a problem. (Sort of like the ribbon, which they are now removing in Explorer) Overall it appears to be somewhat dumbed down for the masses looking to emulate the Mac OS. One can resist the 11 upgrade for a time but at some point 10 will decay to the point many will need to make the move. I will be going with pro mostly to avoid having to deal with having to have an account to tie your machine back to the MS mothership. I wish there was a good way to run the apps I need in Linux well as I would have made that move a long time ago.
I got an Alienware in 2012 with Windows 7. It lasted me until 2023. I think that 11 years was the absolute longest time I could milk it. Now the lack of security updates and incompatibility with newer programs finally caught up to it. 😢
@@cherryartist17 Same for me. Built a great rig in 2011 and ran Win7 Pro until now when I am *_finally_* putting the finishing touches on a new machine, and with it a new OS. I was planning on going with Win10, but I've read that 11 is better at handling scheduling between performance / efficiency cores in intel 12th gen (and higher) cpus .. so time to take the plunge! I just need to weed out all the telemetry etc. Really excited to turn this thing on! Going from an i7-2600K to an i7-12700K .. from 16 GB of DDR3 to 64 GB of DDR5 .. from a SATA 3 7200 RPM platter drive to a Gen 4 m.2 2280 NVMe SSD .. I hope the difference is as startling as I think it should be! 🤞 It will be painful leaving Win7 behind. Without a doubt my favorite OS ever! But, at this point .. like you said, the lack of security updates (and support for newer hardware .. DirectX versions, etc) .. just have to move on! Best of luck to you. ☮
For all that is Holy; make sure you export your bit locker key. One BSOD, if you’re on a piece of crap Dell then one hardware component failure, and you’ll lose access to your data if you do not have the key. I used to work for the state government, and the Dell’s died constantly. BL is a two edged sword that will filet you open and dance on your entrails with salt shoes and laugh at your pathetic crying when everything on the drive is gone.
@@Rood67 I know it has been a whole 2 years but oh my God; I have embarrassingly lost a few laptops because of BitLocker since I had always forgotten to export my key. Dell *sucks.*
Thanks for sharing, Kevin. I need to become familiar with window 10 first. A beginner! I just bought a PC window 10 from Costco 3 months ago. Bought it too early.😏😏
I have the pro version and although I barely use the features that come with it, I do like the access to the group policy editor. I actually only use it to control how Windows update works so it is less annoying / disruptive. I also tried Hyper-V but didn't really like it. I prefer Virtualbox for my usage.
i had windows 10 pro on my diy pc. i did the auto upgrade to windows 11. had it since launch. last night i reformatted my pc and reinstalled windows 11 pro from a flash drive and i am noticing all sorts of stuff thats different. i didnt even know what i had before was home. it just gave me whatever the version is they auto gave you. But i definitely have w11 pro now and i LOVE the new look. its way different than what i had before.. So now im watching this video trying to figure out everyuthing that different. Its like im experiencing windows 11 for the first time all over again.
If I switch UI from English to my native language I understand the words but I can't find anything anymore. I've been using English Windows since NT 4 which couldn't switch languages - you had to reinstall from a different CD 🙂
What? No remote desktop on home ver.? We've had that as a standard built in windows feature forever. Guess it's some kinda security measure. All in all, I think your 3rd party software recommendations should be enough for me to go for the home version. Thanks for the invaluable info!
I am impressed, Kevin! There is such a big difference in the functionality of Home and Pro. Also you are my inspiration and I have learnt something for you. You have taught me to take advantage of the situation and adjust accordingly. Right now Windows 11 is the trend and you are uploading many Windows 11 videos and they are getting lots of views! And I remember this thumbnail from the word to PDF video. Looking forward to more such eye-opening content!
Appreciate the video! Very concise, thanks! Thanks for leaving out a long winded explanation of business features most home users won't need. We do in fact not know what these features mean, so I'm pretty sure I can live without them 😂
I think for now I'm gonna stay on windows 10 pro until the updates and run out and just stay informed of Windows 11 if they release updates that would make me consider switching earlier than intended. The only Windows 11 pro feature I'd want is Bitlocker, but spending money for only 1 additional feature is not something I want to do unless I really have no choice in the future.
I have to correct you on one thing: TeamViewer isnt the same thing as Remote Desktop. If you want to use TeamViewer, the PC you want to connect to must be already logged in to Windows with a local user. Once youre connected to the other PC with TeamViewer you see it through the TeamViewer Window kind of like it was live streaming for you but with the addition that you can control it. This also means, that both, you and the user logged into your PC at home can see and to things at the same time. Remote Desktop however is used to actually log into the remote PC using a local user on the PC you want to connect from (or any user from your domain, if youre in one). So the local user on your PC at home must be logged out of Windows since you cant be logged in with two users at once. Im working as a IT supporter at a company and we have both Remote Desktop and TeamViewer and depending on the situation both programs can have their advantages.
Pro has access to the group policy editor that Home does not. Pro was designed for small businesses. That said, most home users don't need the pro version
I beat my head against a wall for hours the other day trying to figure out how to use remote desktop to control my work computer with Pro with my home laptop. I ended up running out of time and just using a Team Viewer trial that just effortlessly worked. I guess I have to get our network admin involved to set up some port forwarding nonsense. So much harder than it needs to be.
Same @@thumirawickramasinghe9670My brain just finds it difficult to absorb information if someone speaks too slowly. I don't speak too fast myself, but I cognate words about 2 or 3 times faster than the average person speaks, and considering this is a review targeted at beginners/the LCD, he is speaking even more slowly than the average American would talk in a conversation. It's fine, but for me, it's somewhat painful, so 1.25 to 2x speed is ideal with many videos like this.
Hi Kevin, do you have a video about the importance of product keys in Windows, and what do you think is the impact on the future of the pc (if any) if you bought non-authorized key? Thank you!
Yes mine came with Window Pro 10 on my Dell 8940 XPS Desktop 🖥 I only used it for two month with ten pro on it before I upgraded to Windows 11 pro for free.
I always upgrade my OS. I have been there than that and I think Windows 11 is actually better than the launch of Windows 8 (no Start button lol). What I will miss with Windows 10 is my organized folders when pressing Start. Just waiting for Windows update to say that I can download and install. I think you can do it manually but I think it is better to wait until they fix all the performance issues since I am using AMD.
Thanks for the video. I run a dual boot, Windows 10 and Linux Mint 20.3 Cinnamon. I like hearing about the many features of Window 11 Pro but don't think I am smart enough to use them or in need of them. I am 74 years old and have had a brain aneurysm burst. Then patched and then a shunt installed because the patch was leaking. It does sound neat to have the ability to run other operating systems. I would like to here more about running them from a USB flash drive like you can test drive Linux Mint. I am using a Dell Inspiron 15 Laptop computer with an Intel Core i7-7500U Processor. I take that to mean 2 cores. My Windows 10 got very slow. When I would turn on my computer it would be hours before it was fast enough to use. A lot of times I think Windows 10 used all of the CPU and hardly allowed me to use my own computer. So I got mad!! (1.) I bought a 14" HP Chromebook computer, (2.) Tried Linux Mint on a USB flash drive in the Dell laptop. It worked so good that I installed Linux Mint as adual boot and use Linux 99% of the time. I have an Android phone and use Google Chromium on the Linux Mint boot. I have the same Calendar, Contacts, Google Keep, and links to other Google apps on all 3. The 14" HP Chromebook computer, it is very fast but I still like Linux Mint the best. How many cores would I need in order for Windows to let me use my computer with out delay? I am considering buying a new 15" laptop with an i7 processor.
I use windows 11 pro due to having sandboxed apps as well as virtualization... I use bit locker too and I have all the security features enabled. I use Linux on a laptop because I do love Linux but my main rig uses windows mostly for everything especially games. I use an alternative antivirus software just so that I have something dedicated to keeping my pc locked down away from issues. I also use a VPN pretty much all the time. I'm pretty much secure from most threats and yes I am also tech savvy I havnt had one virus or malware. And I make sure to never go to any links and run anything that I shouldnt run. If you can be careful when browsing the web then you can be sure to not get hacked or have malware.
i'm surprised how a lot of people refuse the idea of installing win 11 just because of system requirements. Bypassing them is completely legal and you won't face any problems, unless you bypass the CPU requirements.
Thank you for the overview! I am interested in both my wife and I using the same desktop computer SIMULTANEOUSLY.... will either of these products HOME or PRO, allow us to do so? When I note simultaneously, I dont mean on the same desktop, but just each of us accessing the computer and working on our separate files / accounts ? Thank you in advance
I dunno. I'm confused, why would Microsoft rule out older hardware, I mean even ten year old machines could upgrade to Windows 10 from XP, but now it's like most machines without a TPM are being blacklisted. I hope MS focuses on customers cause it's not just plain Jane hardware that dictates profitability, or is MS turning up with state of the art hardware better than a Surface line.
Hey Kevin. I purchased a laptop with 11 home. Can I use Remote Desktop to connect to my desktop with the laptop and the desktop connect to the laptop on my home network?
I have a Win10 laptop running Home edition, but I also have a Win10 Pro license that I haven't used. I guess I should upgrade that first before upgrading to Win11. Can you recommend a good video on how to do that? 😉
2:12 "Why would you ever need that much ram?"
Chrome: Allow me to introduce myself
😂
😂🙏😹
@@lahirumadushanka5756 the hands turned the human into a cat
@@TAKV_gaming 😹🙏🤣
@@KevinStratvert lOl
Famous last words : nobody will ever need that much memory 😹
😂
Once 640 KB RAM was expected to be really enough for everyone 🤔
@@Wodenseyes yeah . but he talk about RAM memory., not hard drive
I think video uploader never opened 10 chrome tabs at the same time
I actually heard that said once. I was in a game store in the late-80s and this was the store owner’s response to the launch of the Commodore 128.
I found every youtuber talking about the difference missed one big feature: Pro version allows all display languages, whereas Home version only allows using one default language. It's a very important feature for multilingual users, I switch between English, Chinese and Japanese frequently.
That is good to know; thank you!
True. I care a lot about this feature as well! I'm a polyglot too~
Encryption & Sandbox options is one of the big things for me when it comes to Home vs Pro I recently got a upgrade key to upgrade my Windows 10 Home keep up the good work my man.
is that how when I was on the pro version I had encrypted DNS but now that i'm on home I can't? Or is there a setting I can change I can't remember if that's what I did previously.
I would this it'd be possible to have the same encryption type especially if it's just dns.
Great overview of Home vs. Professional. My laptop used to have Windows Professional, but now it belongs to a relative. I'm now using Home. Until I saw this video, I didn't think there was much of a distinction between Pro and Home. But, thanks to you, I now understand that there are considerable gaps. Keep rocking with Windows 11!
i think for personal uses home edition is enough
Basically, 3rd Party and Linux basically do this 4 3 but this is all Microsoft
I use Remote Desktop all the time at work. It's super duper handy for logging into servers without having to actually walk into the server room or anything.
Actually one of my favorite features.
I could see the potential for it being useful on a PC but I can't think of any real world examples I'd be using any time soon.
yall paying for windows?
lol
I had 0 clue on how not to, I kept looking up how to get it without paying but nothing really popped up.
@@breadsticks992prebuilts or laptops
@@breadsticks992 VK7JG-NPHTM-C97JM-9MPGT-3V66T use this win 11 pro upgrade key :)
yea same i couldn't find a way that didnt look too sus @Anon-xz6hu
Nice, thanks for this video. I hear that both are even better now that we're 2 years into this thing!
I just upgraded to windows 11 pro so I could use windows sandbox, thanks Kevin!
For me... I will wait until at least a year to allow for all the bug fixes, tweaks, and adjustments based upon consumer reaction to settle down. Thus far 11 does appear to have some nice features but it also has eliminated some features that I use regularly. I wish they would quit messing around with the start button and taskbar. My take... changes that are mostly a solution in search of a problem. (Sort of like the ribbon, which they are now removing in Explorer) Overall it appears to be somewhat dumbed down for the masses looking to emulate the Mac OS.
One can resist the 11 upgrade for a time but at some point 10 will decay to the point many will need to make the move. I will be going with pro mostly to avoid having to deal with having to have an account to tie your machine back to the MS mothership. I wish there was a good way to run the apps I need in Linux well as I would have made that move a long time ago.
I got an Alienware in 2012 with Windows 7. It lasted me until 2023. I think that 11 years was the absolute longest time I could milk it. Now the lack of security updates and incompatibility with newer programs finally caught up to it. 😢
did you get it?
@@cherryartist17 Same for me. Built a great rig in 2011 and ran Win7 Pro until now when I am *_finally_* putting the finishing touches on a new machine, and with it a new OS. I was planning on going with Win10, but I've read that 11 is better at handling scheduling between performance / efficiency cores in intel 12th gen (and higher) cpus .. so time to take the plunge! I just need to weed out all the telemetry etc.
Really excited to turn this thing on! Going from an i7-2600K to an i7-12700K .. from 16 GB of DDR3 to 64 GB of DDR5 .. from a SATA 3 7200 RPM platter drive to a Gen 4 m.2 2280 NVMe SSD .. I hope the difference is as startling as I think it should be! 🤞
It will be painful leaving Win7 behind. Without a doubt my favorite OS ever! But, at this point .. like you said, the lack of security updates (and support for newer hardware .. DirectX versions, etc) .. just have to move on!
Best of luck to you. ☮
I loved the set up in Windows 7. I hate most of the changes!
So if your a gamer with 1 cpu and only 64gb ram get HOME. THANKS MATE, very professional and informative.
@LSprunk ya I went with 7800mhz ddr5 so I’m only at 32gb right now.
Thanks. Recently installed Win 11 on an older i5 and it activated with Win 11 Pro so good to know about Sandbox and I've just turned bitlocker on too.
For all that is Holy; make sure you export your bit locker key.
One BSOD, if you’re on a piece of crap Dell then one hardware component failure, and you’ll lose access to your data if you do not have the key.
I used to work for the state government, and the Dell’s died constantly. BL is a two edged sword that will filet you open and dance on your entrails with salt shoes and laugh at your pathetic crying when everything on the drive is gone.
i also have windows 11 Pro it upgraded my windows 10 home to windows 11 pro with license key from home version :D
@@Rood67 I know it has been a whole 2 years but oh my God; I have embarrassingly lost a few laptops because of BitLocker since I had always forgotten to export my key. Dell *sucks.*
Thanks for sharing, Kevin. I need to become familiar with window 10 first. A beginner! I just bought a PC window 10 from Costco 3 months ago. Bought it too early.😏😏
I purchased mine from costco with windows 10 and just upgraded to windows 11 pro after using it for two months.
You mean 11? Windows 10 has been out since forever.
I have the pro version and although I barely use the features that come with it, I do like the access to the group policy editor. I actually only use it to control how Windows update works so it is less annoying / disruptive.
I also tried Hyper-V but didn't really like it. I prefer Virtualbox for my usage.
i have it too
Which laptop do you have?cost of windows 11 professional please
@@bsmishra6922 free
@@bsmishra6922free to update to win 11 if you already have the lates version of win 10
how do i buy it
2:34 Thanks for the info Kevin. It's the information that I need before I use Windows 11
Presenting the topic in an amazing way, well-done man, thanks
Always helpful. Thanks a lot Kevin!👍
A million subscribers 🤯 well deserved, Kevin!
I think I’m gonna stay with what’s freeeee
me tooooooooooooooooooo
@@blenderbay same
i have windows 11 pro and i didnt spend a penny
@@mrbrassballs7704 cracked version or genuine
linux is what you need!
i had windows 10 pro on my diy pc. i did the auto upgrade to windows 11. had it since launch. last night i reformatted my pc and reinstalled windows 11 pro from a flash drive and i am noticing all sorts of stuff thats different. i didnt even know what i had before was home. it just gave me whatever the version is they auto gave you. But i definitely have w11 pro now and i LOVE the new look. its way different than what i had before.. So now im watching this video trying to figure out everyuthing that different. Its like im experiencing windows 11 for the first time all over again.
For me the single language limitation in home version was the reason why I changed to Pro.
If I switch UI from English to my native language I understand the words but I can't find anything anymore. I've been using English Windows since NT 4 which couldn't switch languages - you had to reinstall from a different CD 🙂
What? No remote desktop on home ver.? We've had that as a standard built in windows feature forever. Guess it's some kinda security measure.
All in all, I think your 3rd party software recommendations should be enough for me to go for the home version. Thanks for the invaluable info!
I am impressed, Kevin! There is such a big difference in the functionality of Home and Pro. Also you are my inspiration and I have learnt something for you. You have taught me to take advantage of the situation and adjust accordingly. Right now Windows 11 is the trend and you are uploading many Windows 11 videos and they are getting lots of views! And I remember this thumbnail from the word to PDF video. Looking forward to more such eye-opening content!
holy crap I did not expect you here neil
@@ronykax im famous
just sandbox alone is enough for me to go pro everytime. Having that option built in with no added programs is great.
I am in IT school so upgrading from home to pro was a good move for me, I also found a great deal that only cost me $12 CAD to upgrade :O
Need a video on how to set up Remote Desktop Connection so that multiple users can access it at once simultaneously
Thanks for the suggestion! I've added this to my list. Stay tuned. Cheers!
That requires a product like TS-Plus if you want access it at once simultaneously
@@grahame8032 Could you please elaborate or share a video?
todayyy" i love the new intro
Appreciate the video! Very concise, thanks! Thanks for leaving out a long winded explanation of business features most home users won't need. We do in fact not know what these features mean, so I'm pretty sure I can live without them 😂
I think for now I'm gonna stay on windows 10 pro until the updates and run out and just stay informed of Windows 11 if they release updates that would make me consider switching earlier than intended. The only Windows 11 pro feature I'd want is Bitlocker, but spending money for only 1 additional feature is not something I want to do unless I really have no choice in the future.
? Bitlocker has been around since at least Windows 7 Ultimate. You already have it if you have 10 pro.
Toda-a-a-a-y.. What an incredible intro, bro!
I am eagerly waiting for this...
Third party software can encrypted your hard drive as well.
Good point! 👍
Thanks for Sharing this video 😊😊😊
I am overexcited to join your discord I want to be first when you make xD
Very educative . Watching from Cameroon
dude i sub to u when you had only 100k subs and now u have 1mil omg good luck dude
x2 speed, your welcome
Imagine the pain talking with him irl
Damn bro Krazy attention span!!!
Helpful vid @kevin If I buy from Microsoft store will that be a retail version that I can transfer indefinitely?
I paid for pro mainly for Sandbox and Application Guard as that allows me inherent freedoms. Plus its right to do so.
Thank you for the video. Concise and very informative. Will definitely be going Pro for hyper-v
Nice info. Thanx Kevin
Very helpful information mate
Thanks 👏
I saved this video, you are clear and concise, thanks
I have to correct you on one thing: TeamViewer isnt the same thing as Remote Desktop.
If you want to use TeamViewer, the PC you want to connect to must be already logged in to Windows with a local user. Once youre connected to the other PC with TeamViewer you see it through the TeamViewer Window kind of like it was live streaming for you but with the addition that you can control it. This also means, that both, you and the user logged into your PC at home can see and to things at the same time.
Remote Desktop however is used to actually log into the remote PC using a local user on the PC you want to connect from (or any user from your domain, if youre in one). So the local user on your PC at home must be logged out of Windows since you cant be logged in with two users at once.
Im working as a IT supporter at a company and we have both Remote Desktop and TeamViewer and depending on the situation both programs can have their advantages.
Pro has access to the group policy editor that Home does not. Pro was designed for small businesses. That said, most home users don't need the pro version
Very clear. Thank you ❤
I beat my head against a wall for hours the other day trying to figure out how to use remote desktop to control my work computer with Pro with my home laptop. I ended up running out of time and just using a Team Viewer trial that just effortlessly worked. I guess I have to get our network admin involved to set up some port forwarding nonsense. So much harder than it needs to be.
I had to rewind to hear the Tooddday again
thanks for the explanations about Windows 11 pro and home, otherwise Russian blogs have no explanation of what the difference is windows
"Why would you ever need that much ram?"
My company pays for my computer 😉
You could need above that in swap memory from your ssd when doing machine learning.
Thanks for the info :)
Thanks for the information sir! I found it very useful.❤
I always wondered ❤. Thank you
I had Windows 10 professional. Today mine just upgraded to Windows 11 professional. I'm still tinkering with it.
Thank you for the information! 😊
My laptop came with Pro, but I've never found a reason to use any of the features.
Kevin in every video:
" Tooo~dayy"
yup!
Good introduction to the product, thanks.
Brilliant video. It has really helped me with my purchasing decision. Thank you!!!
Thanks naa daily for another windows 11 video hope there's more coming soon
More to come!
I'm playing this video in 1.25x speed
Y
Same @@thumirawickramasinghe9670My brain just finds it difficult to absorb information if someone speaks too slowly. I don't speak too fast myself, but I cognate words about 2 or 3 times faster than the average person speaks, and considering this is a review targeted at beginners/the LCD, he is speaking even more slowly than the average American would talk in a conversation. It's fine, but for me, it's somewhat painful, so 1.25 to 2x speed is ideal with many videos like this.
Fair he talks slow
Thanks
Hi Kevin, do you have a video about the importance of product keys in Windows, and what do you think is the impact on the future of the pc (if any) if you bought non-authorized key? Thank you!
well done and thanks for the info
I think sandbox feature is very neat .
I AM USING WINDOWS 11 PRO AND IT IS GOOD.
Welcome to the Windows 11 pro gang
@@thetriangleboi thanks
@@thetriangleboi I will join soon once my DDR5 gets delivered.
What About Windows 11 Enterprise?
All I needed was a group policy editor 🥲
well you can do something from registries
Very informative. Thanx (Even the Best Buy Geek Squad couldn't give me these basics) :-)
Yes mine came with Window Pro 10 on my Dell 8940 XPS Desktop 🖥 I only used it for two month with ten pro on it before I upgraded to Windows 11 pro for free.
Thank u bro
For explaining 🤗
I have the same black sand wallpaper. Good choice!
I always upgrade my OS. I have been there than that and I think Windows 11 is actually better than the launch of Windows 8 (no Start button lol). What I will miss with Windows 10 is my organized folders when pressing Start. Just waiting for Windows update to say that I can download and install. I think you can do it manually but I think it is better to wait until they fix all the performance issues since I am using AMD.
2:07 that’s my main storage😂💀
Awesome explanation 😀 thank you
"Should you upgrade?"
*me: it's time for Windows Homepro*
Thanks for the video. I run a dual boot, Windows 10 and Linux Mint 20.3 Cinnamon.
I like hearing about the many features of Window 11 Pro but don't think I am smart enough to use them or in need of them. I am 74 years old and have had a brain aneurysm burst. Then patched and then a shunt installed because the patch was leaking.
It does sound neat to have the ability to run other operating systems. I would like to here more about running them from a USB flash drive like you can test drive Linux Mint.
I am using a Dell Inspiron 15 Laptop computer with an Intel Core i7-7500U Processor. I take that to mean 2 cores.
My Windows 10 got very slow. When I would turn on my computer it would be hours before it was fast enough to use. A lot of times I think Windows 10 used all of the CPU and hardly allowed me to use my own computer.
So I got mad!!
(1.) I bought a 14" HP Chromebook computer,
(2.) Tried Linux Mint on a USB flash drive in the Dell laptop. It worked so good that I installed Linux Mint as adual boot and use Linux 99% of the time. I have an Android phone and use Google Chromium on the Linux Mint boot. I have the same Calendar, Contacts, Google Keep, and links to other Google apps on all 3. The 14" HP Chromebook computer, it is very fast but I still like Linux Mint the best.
How many cores would I need in order for Windows to let me use my computer with out delay? I am considering buying a new 15" laptop with an i7 processor.
Very Clear explanations and alternative software explained in this video, Excellent video my friend, awesome job
Thanks!
Thanks for detailed information
normal guys: we are enough with over 100gb
gamer : i need more than 2 TB
MBR RAM Table partition 😂
We are looking for GPT grade RAM table upto Exabytes 😂😳
Thank you for this overview, now I know that I need PRO =)
I love it when someone like your comment and hear the notification 🔔🛎
I use windows 11 pro due to having sandboxed apps as well as virtualization... I use bit locker too and I have all the security features enabled. I use Linux on a laptop because I do love Linux but my main rig uses windows mostly for everything especially games. I use an alternative antivirus software just so that I have something dedicated to keeping my pc locked down away from issues. I also use a VPN pretty much all the time. I'm pretty much secure from most threats and yes I am also tech savvy I havnt had one virus or malware. And I make sure to never go to any links and run anything that I shouldnt run. If you can be careful when browsing the web then you can be sure to not get hacked or have malware.
"it supports 2 tb of ram"
*Ferb, i know what we are gonna do today.*
wouuuuuuuuuuuuuu ... I always want it to know the diference ...thank you kevin ... you are awesome .. saludos desde PERU!!
i'm surprised how a lot of people refuse the idea of installing win 11 just because of system requirements. Bypassing them is completely legal and you won't face any problems, unless you bypass the CPU requirements.
Very well explained video well done video
Thank you for the overview! I am interested in both my wife and I using the same desktop computer SIMULTANEOUSLY.... will either of these products HOME or PRO, allow us to do so? When I note simultaneously, I dont mean on the same desktop, but just each of us accessing the computer and working on our separate files / accounts ? Thank you in advance
the pro version allow for all languages while the home version allow one by default now that is pretty cool
Amazing work Kevin!!!!!!!!!!! you taught a lot of tech in this quarantine
For that A big thank you and I love that line "tooddayy"😊😊
"...supports up to one CPU..." So, I don't need a CPU to run Windows 11 home? Awesome!
0:00 - Hi Kevin. 👋 7:34 - 1068th like from me. 👍 Cheers.
I tried to install windows mixed reality with windows 11 but it's not installing I have to install windows10 to install it ... what is the problem
I dunno. I'm confused, why would Microsoft rule out older hardware, I mean even ten year old machines could upgrade to Windows 10 from XP, but now it's like most machines without a TPM are being blacklisted. I hope MS focuses on customers cause it's not just plain Jane hardware that dictates profitability, or is MS turning up with state of the art hardware better than a Surface line.
Hey Kevin. I purchased a laptop with 11 home. Can I use Remote Desktop to connect to my desktop with the laptop and the desktop connect to the laptop on my home network?
Good to know. Thanks.
I have a Win10 laptop running Home edition, but I also have a Win10 Pro license that I haven't used. I guess I should upgrade that first before upgrading to Win11. Can you recommend a good video on how to do that? 😉
Go to Settings > System > Activation... you can then swap out your key to the pro key.
@@KevinStratvert Thanks Kevin
you didn't even mentioned group policy, which is really a crucial thing to mention
bro gave me a good explanation.
Short answer: No, not at this present day, unless you're Bruce Wayne spying on all of Gotham.
i like how he smiles after he says something, very likeable guy
Honestly, it bothers me that he does that. Makes me anxious.
@@osakoedward Lmao.
@@osakoedward Agree it feels a very artificial smile