this post was submitted on 26 Feb 2024
542 points (100.0% liked)
tails: A Place for Mastodon Posts
355 readers
1 users here now
A virtual community
Posts from Mastodon users, featured natively in a community, so you can view them without the need for them to be re-hosted or screenshoted, and reply to the original author and Mastodon respondents if you wish.
Has so far included content from Warsandpeas, Mr. Lovenstein, SMBC, Loading Artist, Low Quality Facts, nixCraft, ElleGray, and other interesting or provocative stuff I've random'd across on Mastodon.
Supported:
Comments & Upvotes
Unsupported:
Posts, Downvotes, & PD's Automod
founded 9 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
About a year ago an update came out where even without an internet connection it wouldn’t even let me get past the sign in screen. It just told me to connect to the internet to proceeds or something. Not sure if that’s still a thing or not.
Last I checked, there was a command prompt method. I think this still works: tomshardware.com/…/install-windows-11-without-mic…
I used some command prompt to get around it, so I’m not saying it’s impossible. but unless you are decently techy, you will not know to do it.
The guides I found give you every single detail you’d need to know. If you know how to read, you can use the terminal bypass method.
Right, but my mom and dad would not even think that there is a way around it. They wouldn’t even know to look.
Sure, but are they ones who care about not having a Microsoft account?
They might even think it is convenient.
If someone is privacy aware enough, they’ll find the solution themselves.
Bingo.
I did it the other day without issue. Went back to fedora when I realized that the middle click could only do either of its functions in windows on my ThinkPad, while it can do both in Linux.
Confirming, in December I didn’t have Wi-Fi drivers and thus couldn’t login to install the Wi-Fi drivers.
It is but here’s still a workaround. If you open the windows terminal on the login screen, disable the internet connection and run “oobeypassnro” you will not be forced to log in.
I think you are missing a \b. OOBE\ (Out of Box Experience) bypass NRO (eNROllment).
Nope, the command I shared is correct.