Tiny 11 Is A Super Fast Stripped Down Version Of Windows 11, Needs On Only 2GB Ram!
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- Опубліковано 26 лип 2024
- Tiny11 by NTDEV Is a super lite weight and optimized custom build of Windows 11 That runs on systems with as little as 2GB of RAM, It takes up just 8GB of disk space and no TPM 2.0 Is required so running Tiny 11 on older systems not supported officially by windows 11 is easy. In this video show you how to download and Install Tiny 11 on your PC or laptop.
Download Tiny 11 Here: archive.org/details/tiny-11_2...
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00:00 Introduction
00:45 Tiny 11 Overview
03:04 How To Install Tiny 11
07:33 A Few Tips and Tricks
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Dang you actually covered it. I hope to see more of this OS in gaming and emulation. Love your videos and you're channel is honestly one of the one's I look out for when stuff like this gets released.
Imagine if Microsoft actually made the operating system bloat free. I am considering this for business use as well.
They totally could. Windows could be the fastest and most lightweight desktop OS if MS wanted. But it's a corporation, and Windows relies on hardware sales and lots of data collection to be profitable, they need a whole lot of processes running in the background, and don't care about making old devices unusable with their OS.
MS have a desktop OS monopoly, many professional applications and games still don't run on Linux, so they're still not worried about loosing their market-share, no matter how shitty their attitude is.
@@WolfiiDog13 Actually a lot of window's bloat comes from the stuff they add into it that is for third party, mostly the companies that make the computer you're using
Same. It takes a lot of time creating new images for our company to deploy out to our mini-PCs and laptops because of us needing to remove all the bloatware. Not sure how updates work with this mini version of Windows though. Just hoping the bloat won't return after updates are applied. Otherwise I am very interested in testing this out.
@@victorkreig6089 Let's be honest, it's both.
There's a TON of backwards compatibility baked into windows OS still going back all the way to XP as well as basic drivers to handle vast swaths of different hardware produced over decade(s) at least well enough to detect and talk to that hardware in order to find and install better drivers.
That's not ideal, but I also get it.
But Windows is also crammed with bloat that I cannot remove and do not want, like Cortana, which can only be shut off, not removed entirely, and god knows how much data scraping.
@@beanshady if the bloat isn't present on your computer, it won't be updated or reinstalled.
If you deploy images at work, you should have an idea about how to remove these apps from the wim image prior creating the corporate image (if you are not the one preparing the image, then my apologies).
That said, look it up. It's quite straight forward for a techie person.
This would be perfect for those HDMI PC sticks also, many of them shipped with 60gb drives and are unusable now. This could potentialy bring a lot of tech back to life! Great vid.
This appears to be a great option for older PCs. In the past I have resorted to Linux distributions for keeping end of life Windows laptops in a usable state, but with mixed results. Thank you for the video.
If someone has an older PC, it cannot support beyond Directx 9, so there is no point in it having beyond Windows 7, which already uses far less resources than Windows 11, and also has lite versions that use even less.
@@lepayen i have older like 13 year's old pc and i can run w10 with out problem.
@@mpischannel1832 Did you even read my entire comment? Because your response would assume I was saying that you can not run windows 10, which has absolutely not one thing to do with my comment...
@lepayen Not all the comment but now i read it
It would be cool if there was like a Tiny11 preset for NTLite or even a standalone script / utility for making the necessary modifications to the system files. This way Microsoft will have basically no legal ground to stop the OS from getting into the hands of users. Additionally such a script could be open source, allowing the community to make improvements. Even if it is a closed source utility, there would be potential for custom presets that work better than in NTLite. It would also make Windows modification more accessible
Something like MSMG toolkit and CTT winutil?
The developer actually left NTLite "Auto-saved.xml" script inside the ISO.
Chris Titus Tech has a gamer preset for 10 and 11. It trims a lot out including the MS store app.
You can take this tiny iso and cut it more with NTLite)
I saw a video from Craft Computing that goes over a GitHub utility that does exactly this. You can even choose what gets removed, what each "service" does, etc. Can't recall what the utility's called though
For people who are confused like me.
The files are called B1 and B2 for Beta1 and Beta2 (2 is newer). The torrent does NOT include version with no system requirements, but Rufus can already take care of that for you.
Mine has no wifi? Any ideas?
@@kingfish600 I am in the same boat... let me know if you figure it out.
@@kingfish600 connect to ethernet and let windows download wifi drivers for your wifi adapter
For those with missing Wifi Drivers, Finally solved it. I had to force the installation to go into Audit mode, CTRL+SHIFT+F3, I downloaded the adapter drivers to another thumb drive, then go into the device manager, find the broke network adapter, update its drivers from thumb drive, then reboot into OOBE and finish the installation. Bobs your uncle.
freaking awesome! I'm now using this build on my HP laptop. i5-8250u / 16GB Ram. yeah, it's overkill to run this on my laptop, but i despise the bloatware in windows. using this build is way better than running the debloat ps scripts. this build appears to be the Windows Enterprise version. I have an msdn account through work and it took my Windows 10 Pro product license key without issue. thanks for shining a light on Tiny11.
This seems like the perfect thing to keep older windows tablets running a modernized OS. Something like a Surface 4 with those 6th gen i7s and i5s and 4-8GB of RAM would benefit quite a lot.
Do you know if the touch features will work?
@@dagoat3162 I have 0 clue. Only one way to find out I guess.
@@dagoat3162 there's a possibility they removed touch drivers so it's not gonna work, but I'm not sure, needs testing
@@丶丷 Thanks for the reply, I'm hoping they didn't remove the touch drivers
I might give it a go on my surface go.
Since the other pc handhelds have been thrown out there I may as well bring up the one I preordered! Seeing a video of this running on the OXP2 would be sweet! Also, is there any mention of the telemetry being stripped out as well? I imagine it is but it’s something that still needs to be mentioned/asked.
Great video as always. We would also love a video that compare gaming and emulation between tiny 11 and a stock Windows 11 install to see if there is an actual difference.
Yeah.
I use Superlite SE, which is also a modified Windows 11 ISO but it uses even less RAM. Just 0.9GB out of 4GB installed on my 10 year old laptop. There's no Store app, no MS account requirement, no Edge, and there's versions that don't even have Defender (which is what i'm using). It honestly feels like a free hardware upgrade, everything is much snappier, it's very noticeable. It has a large improvement to minimum frame rates with some games too. Infact it's mostly aimed at gaming but also happens to be ideal for old hardware. You should do a vid on it with benchmarks....
@@plebius Yeah it's updated regularly, including Windows preview builds.
@@ItPutsTheLotionOnItsSkin can u tell from whete you downloaded it
This could work great with the Steam Deck, be it on SD card or SSD, it would definitely open up storage beyond the OS on the medium used, not to mention more RAM for games, even with the UMA buffer set to 4GB.
Definitely would like to see a vid on it!
This was my thought as well, hope he does a video on it for dual boot.
I second this, really hope ETA Prime does a video on this.
GOD YES please! I'm sure I could DIY, but it'd be nice to see a run thru by my fave geek.
What's the virtualization capabilities of the Deck? Rather than dual boot for the rare times Windows is entirely needed, I'd be more interested in seeing Tiny11 virtualized with relevant file storage local to the Deck itself; essentially, make Tiny11 an application via a VM environment that points to a folder for all the Windows-relevant programs and files.
The one hiccup I think there is in that for me is IIRC xbox game services aren't here.. though if they can be installed, and things update normally? I would 100% reload my WinDeck with this.
This is awesome. I can use some older PCs that I can turn into simple arcades using launchbox well bigbox. This great to hear.
I've been watching several videos for the Tiny 11, and your's was the best and precise and clear and Zero fuss....thank you. Subscribed
Thank you for sharing about this! Downloading it as I'm typing.
I love the idea of debloated windows, but it is always a big security risk on dailying a modified windows build that you're not sure is trustworthy. Maybe this one is, i don't know.
Personally I wouldn't risk it. It's not from an official source and you have no idea what's on it. If your system is running this slow then ie would be a good idea to either install Linux, Windows 10 or save some money and upgrade.
You can make your own custom install.
been running ghoste spectres isos for 2 years never had an issue and i have it on multiple systems still requires a key and has defender and official updates but extremely lightweight
I know the guy behind tiny11 and has said what programs he used.
its called MSMG Toolkit and you can use it too for free.
I have used it for a making a minimal windows 10 1607 install and works perfectly
@@josephdias5859 Same never had no issues with ghost spectre since he started
Nice! Thank you!
Thanks so much for this video. I was able to breath life back into my old laptop using this info!
Great tutorial, just got the system started. No filler content or extra words just important info fantastic video
I installed on a VM within my Proxmox a couple of days back. Set it up with 1.5Gb RAM and 2 vCPUs. It's rocking it! I use that for random stuff and testing usability for general purposes and going great so far.
I'll do the same, I needed a windows sandbox. Thanks for sharing your experience
I did it with a Dual Xeon E5-2690 V2 assigned 2 CPU’s with 3 cores/6 threads(6cores/12threads total)(host) and only 16Gb of memory. And it runs pretty good. IBM System X3650 M4 with 2x Quaddro K6000 and 192Gb of Ram. I also run XPenology DS3622xsp on it Alpine Linux for my docker containers(pi-hole, Frigate, portainer, Odoo, Syncthing, nginx proxy manager, Home Assistant and unbound) as Well as HiveOS and Kali. Those old servers are really versatile and powerful. But Tiny11 missed too much features. So installed Ghost Spectre afterwards. It’s way better
How did you manage to install on proxmox I'm trying to do same but somehow struggling and no idea why
@@manojkhatri1788 I used GhostSpectre it installed with no problems immediately through Proxmox with an AMD R5 GPU Passthrough 12 Xeon E5-2670-V2 cores(24 threads) set as Host Processor and 16 Gb of the 128Gb of memory assigned. I think GhostSpectre is way better than Tiny11
@@manojkhatri1788 What are you struggling with? what problem do you have?
I know more or less what they remove or with which programs they could do it (I did it myself, but it takes a while), it's not magic, it's just knowing which processes are the ones that almost nobody uses, especially if it's only for playing games or office.
Could you please tell me? I'd like to do this to my windows 10 nuc which has trouble to run great with all the bloatware.
@@Ustaleone it's a long list of what to do but the primary target of debloat windows 10 and 11 is on UWP Apps.
@Feisal Jauhari Tufail
this, I don't know if my post appeared because I put a link, just in case, as it says here.
Actually there’s a lot more to it that that. It removes telemetry stuff as well, etc. it’s way better than running vainilla Windows 10 or 11 and trying to strip it down. This is based off of Enterprise images.
@@MarcosCodas does it require Enterprise license key to activate?
I remember used Tiny 7 and Tiny XP back in the day. Great stuff.
I still use a tiny 7 from Experience sometimes, real good
Those 200-300 meg idle seems a bit dubious since
1. Its not idling at 300 megs with spare memory but bottlenecked to 300 megs
2. The SSD usage is 100% on both images and that could mean the system is swapping to drive since there’s not enough memory which could make the ssd wear out much quicker, and since ssds arent as fast as system memory (RAM) its going to be a bit laggy as well.
For machines with really low memory I would recommend a light weight linux distribution instead because you can actually have a low resource usage and have spare memory left for doing actual work.
Even tho most people dont like linux and dont wanna use it cus it’s unfamiliar, its a better alternative for these lower end machines. + theres no microsoft / google spyware and its free.
“No ms / g spyware” boy do I have a bridge to sell you
@@umamifan don't understand. Please explain to me.(really)
@@Jhakaas_Jai As requested: The expression means that the person you are saying it to is gullible enough to believe you when you offer to sell them a well know landmark as if you owned it. It's an old expression usually associated with the Brooklyn Bridge and very gullible bumpkins visiting the "big city" for the first time. ;-]
@@robertcartier5088 I was asking about if linux has spyware or not.....if it has please name them and if you know how to remove them. I use linux so.....
@@Jhakaas_Jai and yet, none of that was in the question you actually asked. Nevermind. Good luck.
I wonder if this works on (older) surfaces, too. Would love an in-depth review about the OS with advantages and disadvantages and possible secuity issues.
Feels like it‘s to good to be true. But thanks for the video and making me aware! More, please! ❤
@@triynizzles I installed on my old surface go and I can't access the Microsoft app store and when I try to install chrome or edge I get an error message.
@@triynizzles pentium r
@@triynizzles yea I moved over the chrome installer and edge... Both give me errors
@@triynizzles Thank's for letting me know (replying to the original answer here), great news!
I guess I'll try it, soon!
It doesn’t work lol
I've been hearing about Tiny11. Honestly I'm mostly interested which drawbacks it has. To be so extremely shrunk down, it must have lost some capabilities. What is still left? What functions did we loose? Is it still secure? Do we have Windows Defender / Firewall, etc.? Do we have updates available? These are all important questions in my opinion that haven't been answered. And not gonna lie, I'm gonna educate myself right now.
But would be great content for a follow up video ;)
Let us know what you find.
From what I know, updates from Microsoft aren't available so I don't know how or even if you can get security updates.
Id be skeptical, especially in terms of security, not just in terms of updates. you should probably just make ur own custom windows iso, its pretty ez theres tutorials.
Love to see a follow up on this as well
You'll need to read articles on it. Most UA-camrs cover the most basic crap w/ these OSes. They just want the views from something unordinary like a light W11 but don't actually care about helping much
Thx bro this helped me I was stuck with windows home and it was troubling and now I'm good
Great edition, Thanx for your work!! ;-)
This would be a good way to dualboot for the Steam Deck IF some games in your library are hostile to Proton, but would only dual boot when playing said game.
Love the vid, maybe try Tiny 11 on some PC handhelds like the Ayaneo devices to see if it squeezes any more performance out of games on limited gaming hardware
+1 for this!
1M! Congrats.
This is awesome definitely getting this
Would love if there's a Tiny 11 iso but for ARM laptops.
This would be amazing running on Macbooks M1/M2 via Parallels.
He just released that, check his channel for a download link
@@luluthecat1570thanks for the info
I was wondering why you hadn't talked about Windows customized version as they improve the 1% and 0.1% FPS on many many games making the experience much smoother.
Great video!
can you elaborate? is it called "windows customized version" or are you calling it that? i'm interested
@@vdfritzz search for "Ghost Spectre Windows 11 Superlite" and go down the rabbit hole.
@@vdfritzz its the windows he's talking about in this video, downloadlink is in the discription..
Fantastic. Simple but complete info
This sounds great! So, if I have a piece of Windows software on disc that doesn't take up much room (disk or RAM-wise), I presume it would work just fine on this system? Or if I decided to install it on something a bit more up-to-date, that it would run pretty swiftly with anything the RAM & drive could handle? In the latter circumstance, I'd kind of like to see how it would work as a dedicated system for either graphics editing (Corel Paint Shop Pro) or audio editing (Audacity).
I've tested a bunch of Windows 7 and 10 _Lite_ versions over the course of the years and I always run into problems after a while. At first it seems to run fine and snappy but then a game won't run because of some thing the was removed; programs won't work properly out of the blue, Windows Update will glitch, driver issues may appear, etc. It's like playing with the unexpected. These days I rather prefer to install the full version of Windows 10 or 11 and from that just make my own tweaks with third party tools (Winaero, ThisIsWin11, DControl, Windows Ultimate Toolbox, and whatever I find usefull), and even by only doing this I still have gone through issues (but by only tweaking the basics you can get a big improvement, just like these problematic stripped down versions). So I don't think is worth it installing this kinda of modified version on your main computer, maybe on a secondary on. Having to throubleshoot stuff and never finding an answer and then having to format it again is really frustating.
I recognize your expertise sir. However, I want to ask. Does this lite OS not come with updates or optimizations?
@@troyguererro0898 nope no ability to update. Optimizations are none only are just removing apps
Yeahhhh everyone's all curious about this but a lot of those people don't understand Windows well. MS puts so much shit on it that isn't bloatware, which is the only thing most think about. I am skipping all these lite versions and going to Linux w/ my retro laptops!! (first-time Linux user) 😎
@@troyguererro0898 Same happened for me. Cannot update security updates. And other updates. Some say it is because onedrive is missing. Trying to add those folders back in WinSxS and see.
@@LordGryllwotth man, it sounds like a real hassle huh. What programs are you trying to install?
It would rock if this could be installed in an ARM device. The AYN Odin Base suddenly looks like it could handle Windows. 😍
@@obvious_giraffe8386 yes, but it's not minimal
@@obvious_giraffe8386 I'm sure they will get right on that. 👍
Hey thanks great video. Installed on HP Stream successfully, I now have a usable laptop again with some available hard space.
I am now able to have Windows updates again. Had to manually Activate Windows, which has been the only issue.
If its an ideapad usually if secure boot is enabled you need to use the pinhole to boot to the boot device selection /bios access. It's on the side of the laptop with an arrow icon beside it.
That was interesting.
I have an old (circa 2011) Toshiba laptop with an AMD E450. I tried both the Tiny 10 and the Tiny11 and the 11 beat the pants off the 10. Ran 11 better than it ran 10 or even W7 Home, which it came with. Having 8 GB RAM is probably one of the reasons. All the current updates installed without any problem or errors. It even pulled a digital W11 Pro license out of MS, versus Tiny 10 not registering at all. And as my W7 was for Home, I am surprised.
Snappy is not quite what I would call it but much less laggy than W10 Home was.
too bad the windows update turns it into a bloated windows again
Please do emulation and gaming performance in Tiny11, we would like to see how it runs comparing to Windows 11. I might install this on my old laptop soon.
I'd love to see a battery life comparison in a slightly higher end laptop.
Awsome!!! thank you
The readme for this describes it as "non-serviceable" which I interpret as "no security updates". This machine will over time, become more and more vulnerable.
Good option, i haven't hear of this build so i will definitively take a look. Not sure if you know already or heard but there is also ReviOS, it has windows 10 and 11 versions and they are more robust that this TinyOs but at the same time lighter that the regular Microsoft builds. I'm running that on my pc and is way faster than with the regular builds.
ghoste spectre windows 11 kickass
Nexus lite's builds are much lighter in general but idk if anticheat is working
Fantastic! I have an i5 mini computer that I want to install somethis on. I may go with this or the Chrome OS. Thanks for sharing this with us.
Windows should offer this as an option. Even if it’s a Regedit during the firsts install boot.
I’ve tried slim Windows 11 ISO’s. They almost always end up with issues if you do try installing certain apps. Since some system files either broken or are removed.
I installed this on my AOKZOE handheld and it works for some games, but most require some services that have been removed. The performance delta wasn't worth it in my opinion
You can’t use Xbox game pass so I didn’t end up using it on my aokzoe
this is a really helpful version of windows for those that dualboot their steam decks. I can get around 5 and a half hours using this iso over the normal stock windows.
This is nice 😊. Thank you 😁👍
Firstly, love your videos!
Would be really interested to see Windows 11 Tiny or Steam-Deck if have time!
I have some major concerns:
A) Will there be any problems down the line trying to install software or hardware such as a basic webcam?
B) Is it as secure as vanilla Win11? Can one use it for online banking?
C) Will it not become slow over the course of months of use?
Personally, on a laptop with low specs I would use some lightweight Linux distro. It should be much more secure and more reliable.
My big question really is related to B, will security updates still work?
Use Linux for banking
Webcams don't work, at least on Tiny 10. No issues with software so far, though. 6 months in. I get security updates with the latest version of Tiny 10 and use it for banking, not issues so far. But I do most of my banking from my phone. 6 months in, it's not significantly slower than it was when I first installed it. But I recommend Tiny 10 over Tiny 11 because the development is much more mature. Tiny 11 is newer and some things don't yet work, that do on Tiny 10.
@@MarcosCodas
Thank you for your detailed reply! Very informative!!
I don't think even stock windows 11 is secure for online banking lol
Wondering how tiny11 would run on the steamdeck. Might be exactly what i've been looking for.
Great tutorial, thanks.
I have a quick question for you being as you're one of my favorite content creators when it comes to tutorials and installations and software and reviews. I was wondering if you can do some videos on
Windows 11 Ghost Spectre ? From what I understand it's supposed to be a super lightweight version of Windows 11 similar to tiny 11 but specifically geared towards gaming. It's definitely something I'm considering installing but I would just like one of my favorite content creators to cover it in detail first in a way that I can easily understand. Anyway keep up the great work Have a good one and I'll catch you on the next one.
One problem brought up by others is security updates. They may not work with Tiny 11. Can you check on this?
You'll need to keep the Tiny11 PC disconnected from the internet in order to allay security concerns.
The biggest security concern of Windows is Microsoft themselves. They collect and phone home about everything you do.
@@alx8439 - I have PiHole running. Seems to do a good job of blocking this. Also blocks Roku. Kinda nifty.
I still want all of my updates for Windows, though.
@@Zoyx sure, your choice. But to me, the rule of thumb is: if it's working - don't update it
@@alx8439 yup. Unless I hear about a major security patch issue, I tend not to. Especially after 3-4 years. I've had too many last-updates from Apple that brought my device to a crawl. Never again.
I prefer the Windows 10 IoT Enterprise LTSC for my emulation machine. I stripped out pretty much everything I don't need and have it running as an appliance with ES-DE as the frontend. Works a treat! I'd prefer a Linux distro instead but flexibility with my DS4 controllers just isn't there (such as DS4Windows + HIDHide provides).
Thanks 👍 for everything
I created one of these striped down images that removed the "requirements". I can run updates, but can't do feature update from 21h2 to 22h2. Only time will tell if this b2 version will allow for feature updates. Typically i wouldn't worry about that, but with MS ending support for older versions, it's up to you if you want to miss out on security updates.
Really cool. I am concerned about the security implications of the OS personally.
Yeah, I think I would try it on a vm first
Go for linux
I have an older version, Tiny10, running my my Thinkpad (model X230) and it has run butter smooth for the last few months. I'm definitely gonna "upgrade" to T11. 👍🏼
I got an x260 as well, does the tiny 10 get security updates?
@Kunal I haven't done a Windows Update session yet. I wanted to see how it responds to all of the hardware driver updates first. I will give it a try this weekend and will post an update.
@@HunterKiotori I haven't done a Windows Update session yet. I wanted to see how it responds to all of the hardware driver updates first. I will give it a try this weekend and will post an update.
@@RCfromtheNYC damn, that OS can literally run on a pentium 3 with less than 400 mb ram. I sincerely wished it has an option for phones because with iOS and Android as major platforms, it's getting boring nowadays
@Lavenderfawn you should use it trust me it's incredible!...
I used to run tiny 7 as my main os back when I had a core 2 duo CPU and 2 gb of ram. The only problem is it was 32 bit only. It was some custom iso someone made, had a script that ran on first setup and a folder with some tools, it was unattended, it installed to the desktop. At some point it missed some network feature I needed and getting net framework to work was annoying but aside from that, it worked well for many years for me. Another main feature was that it was 700mb. It could be installed off a CD. The latest windows 7 64 iso is over 5gb if I recall.
How does this hold up with gaming?
i've been using windows 10 LTSC which is also super clean, i'll try this one and see how it performs
Tiny 11 looks cool but i still prefer using Linux for older systems.
Autohotkey is perfect for windows. You can customize buttons to go directly where you want to go. Anything on windows system you can customize to your needs. Wanna run a certain game, press a button and go directly there no waiting. Need notepad, press a button. Watch a MP4, press a button. Customize the PC anyway you like with autohotkey.
@@100Bucks nah
I prefer running every thing with python, shellscript, and rofi on Linux
I'm exited to try this on my 2012 mac mini through Bootcamp
Thank you, I never knew this existed. I tried Atlas OS on a decent dell Laptop but the system is sluggish somehow and some functions don't work properly.
So tried this on a fairly new gen Celeron laptop with 4GB ram, some updates were available so I did them , and the RAM usage shot up from under 1gb ram to 3GB utilized. I had to debloat it again with Chris Titus Script, and it's Windows 11 enterprise and I couldn't activate my Key with it.
Can you do some bench mark about this version on a steamdeck or gpdwin4 to see the difference ?
Likely a terrible experience likely remains a terrible experience with regard to gaming.
I'd be interested to see if this has reduced power draw compared to stock Windows 11 on something like the WIN4 / AYANEO2.
Outside of the APU itself, fan, disk, wireless and screen, the background OS is the largest remainder of power consumption so it could have some marginal improvement on power draw & battery life
EDIT: Also curious how this compares to "Atlas OS", which is a very similar project
This is also something I'm hoping for. Take all that bloat out, and ideally it should be better, but it's still windows.
I installed phoenix lite OS (a stripped down version of Windows 10) to my picoPC.
I wonder how this compares to it.. might try it.
wow really cool i mite just try it out :) cool video :)
I have a few questions about this Tiny11 de-bloated OS
1) What about the Cumulative Update (AKA Patch Tuesday monthly updates)? Like fixed Zero Day Vulnerabilities, and other things.
2) Is hardware drivers are stable? Like the NVIDIA driver update did.
3) Is does have a Microsoft Defender installed? Security is a key to prevent a malicious software.
From my test I can still update using windows update.. What I notice on my first windows update it update the cumulative and defender
Would love to see this on the steamdeck or really any x86 handhelds in general, especially the weaker Vega systems
why the hell would you put this windows crap on steamdeck?? Its got a way superior and free os
@@rikxdragneel5290 better game compatibility, and for a lot of folks, Linux desktop environment is a lot harder to use
@@zigenstern almost all games are playable perfectly on linux nowadays cept for the ones that implements a kernel level anti cheat which is clearly a violation to the user privacy
@@zigenstern and also linux is way easier to install and use than windows
@@rikxdragneel5290 for your maybe, not for everyone
Got this working on my pixelbook its amazing, the only thing was retrieving the drivers that took a little while
currently using it on my laptop and it's great 🙌🙌
Will this OS work as an official Windows copy? I mean, if it can be activated and will get updates. I am interested in a debloated Windows 11 for upgrading from W10.
As i know there are problems with some updates an impossible to install net framework 3.5
Is this something that would benefit steamdeck users who prefer running windows?
This will likely find its way onto the handheld PCs. Awesome.
Very interesting and informative video, thank you. One question, would it be better to clean the HDD with something like Destruct HDD Eraser before installing Tiny11? Thank you for any reply.
Just installed ghost spectre compact, a stripped down windows 11. Loving it. I'll check this one out as I have a 4gb laptop lying around. Thanks
I've been daily driving a laptop with 3GB RAM until a month ago and with Arch/GNU/Linux and KDE it was more than usable :))
Does it say Windows 11 or Tiny 11 or the System Info App? Is it activated out of the box or do we need to purchase a license key to remove the watermark? Thanks. Great video as usual ETA 🖖
Windows 11.
Did you run any benchmarks on this vs a normal W11 install?
Yo Eta love the content man been researching fora minute about tiny 11 and its downloading updates of the latest features not sure if thats supposed to happen so im just letting it run its course right now unless you or someone chimes in otherwise i can just reinstal. Please lmk thanks love the chanel dude! 🤘🏻
I would be interested in gaming and emulation testing. I am still on windows 10 and hate the idea of getting even more bloat to upgrade.
This is not for gaming
Or emulation
For slower and older systems, I also recommend installing an adblocker for web browsers. Not only does it speed some websites up, but it prevents popups and potential malware. I do this to any laptop I get from boomers and elderly folk. Saves me the headache I'll get from fixing their future mistakes. I ask them beforehand if they want to keep it or not.
yep - that's the reason I still use firefox. I've got a spate of extensions for adblocks, and some really nice tools for controlling video playback (magnification etc) as well as custom youtube handlers to filter out their autoplay nonsense and ads that try to get around adblock software.
I'm curious to know if Tiny11 would improve gameplay or not on the AAA titles? Obviously I'm not talking about high end PCs but low to mid tier.
this is the best video you have ever uploaded. no joke!
I installed this as my primary gaming OS. I think there were a few more things that could have been stripped out of the build - I ran Windows Decrapifier on it, and got rid of a few more things. It runs, but some updates don't work (no big deal to me). Hardware seems to install okay. My system is a AMD Ryzen 9 5950X w 128 GB Ram and a Nvidia 3080ti.
I'm kinda curious when I hear about builds like this, is there a reason for that much ram (I.e. running professional software?) cuz that sounds like total overkill for even high end gaming.
@@Bustermachine No particular reason, just did it because I could. ;) The computer was to be used as a Hackintosh once upon a time, but I bought a Mac Studio for that...
I'm interested in using this for my gaming PC as well. I play Star Citizen and feel this OS would benefit gameplay even though I already have a good build. Have you ran into any issues?
I'd be interested to hear how this goes as a gaming OS as well.
Does the Xbox/Gamepass app still work?
Is your primary gaming OS offline only? Why do you think security patches not working can be shrugged off? I'm very curious about that viewpoint.
I'd love an ARM version of this
I would like to see a lightweight Windows ISO tailored for Windows handheld gaming decks like the ROG Ally.
Only the things you need to maintain compatibility, Windows Update, Xbox, and the Windows App Store probably would be a good idea to keep.
Reduced RAM usage would be a great thing on these shared memory APU devices. Plus a reduction in CPU load isn’t a bad idea either. Though the RAM is the real kicker here. You could dedicate more to the graphics with less chance of causing problems from lack of system memory for the rest of the system.
I'm confused if I should use b1 or b2 to get the less ram usage, i tried b1 and it uses at Average 2gb of ram when you are on desktop, and after some optimization it uses 1.8 or 1.7gb
@ETAPrime - I bought the same model laptop from Walmart yesterday, which was delivered this morning. I've since installed Tiny 11 following your video as closely as possible (you did skip some details), and Tiny 11 gets stuck looking for a network. Wifi worked with the original software (Windows 10), so I'm trying to figure out what's happening. Did you have to do anything special to get wifi working on the new install?
I am in the EXCACT same situation as you!! No Network adapter.
Same!!!! What the heck!!
@etaprime any thoughts?
Finally solved it. I had to force the installation to go into Audit mode, CTRL+SHIFT+F3, I downloaded the adapter drivers to another thumb drive, then go into the deivce manager, find the broke network adapter, update its drivers from thumb drive, then reboot into OOBE and finish the installation. Bobs your uncle.
@@slash2podcast You rock! I already had the drivers downloaded and copied to my thumb drive, but I needed to learn about audit mode. I'm writing this comment on the laptop from Chrome. Thanks for posting the solution!
does tiny 11 get better performance than normal windows 11? while it cut off most of the dump, also is it use less power than the regular one?
Yes to both.
I currently just did this to an old laptop and I love it. One question is since its a mortified windows version.... im still seeing "Activate to use this feature" on a few things.. will doing so cause issues or how does one get around that?
Could you test it on one of the handheld consoles you have like the AYANEO 2, see how it affects battery life, if the system consumption is reduced, if it improves gaming performance in any way?
What would the difference be between installing full windows 11 on a high-end system and installing tiny 11 on the same high-end system? Would it give you more/less performance?
It won't necessarily give you a massive performance boost imo. The point of Tiny11 is to get rid of all the bloatware/3rd party nonsense. Another alternative to this would be Ghost spectre's windows 10/11 superlite. I have been using it for months on my main pc and others too
The impact would be minor at best on a high end system, the load the bloat puts on you system is prety negligible on high end systems so removing it won't help much. It really only matters for lower end systems.
I'm shocked you've not put a disclaimer about downloading image's from an unofficial source
It's not a official OS. It's sources are already unofficial. Also this is for older or under spec systems.
Nice video and I am probably going to try this out on my Microsoft surface go. One thing you didn't mention and it may be important that was mentioned by another UA-camr reviewing tiny 11 is that tiny 11 is based off Windows 11 Pro and needs a Windows 11 Pro activation key so I guess if anyone watching this video and reading this comment wants to try it out you can do that for free but if you want to use it long-term and avoid a watermark you need to buy a license.
Hi samuelavery-quinn6965, i got an old surface go as well and am curious as to whether you installed tiny11 on yours? any issues or advice i could use?
What kind of license to I need to buy to activate it?
Thx ETA, I will try to install this on my Kangaroo Plus Mini PC