jack-intel
(Jack (Intel))
1
With the pending EOL of Win 10, IT departments may have some machines to work on. So, we’re wondering if you have a timetable for when you expect to complete any upgrades? Do the fixes for older devices that don’t officially support the new OS, work on the older devices?
Let us know how you are approaching the EOL and what the most significant challenges are.
#IAmIntel
2 Spice ups
In the personal world, I got all family members to upgrade to 11 already. Professionally, we migrated about half of the PCs already. No real reason we haven’t pushed forward with the others, it is more of a “When we and the employee have time, we’ll do it” kind of thing.
Do the fixes for older devices that don’t officially support the new OS, work on the older devices?
Luckily the transition from 10 to 11 is way more foolproof than xp to 7 and 7 to 10. Most devices have drivers that support 10 and 11 and so much software moved to web based, there really isn’t much that we have to worry about.
2 Spice ups
Samael1
(Samael1)
3
Have been involved with the rollout where i currently am, but i was offered a new role on Tuesday and shall be diving head 1st into Win11 in that role as well.
Current role have no inventry at all , so finding out which devices had correct tpm/cpu versions etc was to be a pain. Started playing with PS and managed to get the info required on the tpm chips for each device while looking at an OU in AD. Listed it along with device name as well. Shall be hanging on to that script as my PS is weak at best and it was all self taught.
jack-intel
(Jack (Intel))
4
Thank you for the replies! It looks like many IT pros will be following similar plans and upgrade where possible or needed.
#IAmIntel