Recommended Posts

fail people helping this guy is a major fail ,,,

not sure if this bit of info helps but you could try faking (impersonating) a better one (CPU).

I know of a similar bypass fo OSX however I am not sure if there is such a thing for PC.

you might be better off waiting for the RC so people can start tweaking install files

What you could do (although I dont recommend this as your system will problably crash) is install Windows 8 on a hard drive on a newer system then after instalation but that hard drive in your old system. problabl will not work but....

I have seen instances of this where the system didn't crash. I moved my friends old hdd from his old computer to his new one we were building and it didn't crash but the found new hardware thing went nuts for an hour. This probably won't work though since the computer I have is way newer than my test rig and the hdd in the p4 rig is ide

What you could do (although I dont recommend this as your system will problably crash) is install Windows 8 on a hard drive on a newer system then after instalation but that hard drive in your old system. problabl will not work but....

The kernel will detect at boot that the CPU is not supported and will bugcheck ("blue screen"). This is called out in the whitepaper linked to earlier in this thread.

kernel switch to bypass checks like tha??

Well there isn't one... The idea is to stop it booting there and then rather than allowing it to boot up and potentially cause hardware corruption from doing things on a CPU that the CPU doesn't actually support, the response it gets is completely unknown.

OP go to this link. You can get an Intel i7 2700k, motherboard and memory for about $400. Just need to get a new graphic card and you are set. A good graphic card is about $150. So your looking at $550.

http://www.pricewatc...memory/i7-2700k

And merely by judicious hardware reuse, you can come under that - even from an AGP-based PC.

1. Unless your drives are IDE/ATAPI (say the drives are SATA, for example), you can reuse those as they are. (That's not even remotely silly - there are motherboards that support both SATA *and* AGP; one of them - the ASUS P4C800E-Deluxe - dates back to 2004 and is less than twenty feet from my right elbow.)

2. Power Supplies - if you have a decent power supply (400W or greater), that's reusable as well, more likely than not. While newer motherboards *support* 24+8 PSU connections and 20+4/4+4 variants included) very few require them - if your PSU supports 20+4/4-pin and meets the power requirements, it should still work (taken directly from the manual of the ASUS P8Z77-V).

3. Unlike DDR, DDR3 is *inexpensive, inexpensive. inexpensive* - I can buy a matched (4GBx2) Corsair Vengeance DDR3-1600 pair for $70 at (of all places) Best Buy - typically one of the WORST place to buy memory on a price basis. (And if pricing is that good at one of the WORST places on a price basis, how much better is pricing at the better places, such as Newegg and MicroCenter?)

4. PC cases haven't changed on a basic level; while there are new form-factors (such as BTX and ITX), those remain primarily niches - the basic ATX and mATX haven't gone anywhere. (My current motherboard is mATX- yet it's mounted in an *ATX* mid-tower case; I went mATX for reasons of price/budget. However, the motherboards I have in my shortlist are all ATX, but with my case also being ATX, I don't have to change it.)

  • 2 months later...

This is still another nail in the Windows 8 coffin, as I see it. The UI is controversial and getting a traditional desktop gets more difficult with each release, and now we find that, though it is lighter than Vista and 7, it will refuse to run on certain older hardware, for no better reason than that someone at Microsoft thought that making people "safe" was more important than allowing people to use their software. Whatever would have been wrong with a warning: "Your processor does not support all of Windows 8's security features. Your system may be more susceptible to attack from malicious software. Do you still want to continue installing Windows 8?"

I'm not worried about it. Most of the people I serve (I'm a tech by trade) wouldn't even consider buying Windows 8, for the UI reason alone?they have work to do, and relearning everything is not an option they will willingly choose. The fact that XP/Vista/7 are still working just fine makes the status quo an even more desirable option.

Besides, I think it won't take long for the hackaround community to come up with a solution. It might be a patched kernel, but it would more than likely be a modified bootloader which invokes a TSR to simulate/emulate the necessary functionality. Remember the BIOS SLIC emulation bootloader that pirates use(d?) to fake Windows Vista/7 into thinking you had a particular OEM system so the equivalent OEM Windows would say "Windows is activated" without buying it? It would be much harder, yes, to emulate CPU functionality, but not impossible. It is also possible that the TSR could merely report the existence of said functionality, while the commands would simply be ignored. That would have the same effect as Windows 8 Consumer Preview: it runs without the additional security.

If they don't do it, Windows 8 will just be a bigger flop. Perhaps that wouldn't be all bad. Change for change's sake is rarely good, and "The UI formerly known as Metro" is exactly that. Maybe Microsoft will learn its lesson about making it more difficult to stay with what you prefer.

^^ i didnt even get to that part the adviser before setup even began said processor not compatible. It has to be a glitch or this is the most bloated version of windows to date

You probably aren't going to get a lot of help with that kind of attitude. :rolleyes:

  • 4 weeks later...

I have an old P4 (Gallatin core) machine that was a hotrod back in 2004 (extreme edition). It runs Windows 7 like a champ. It's been running non stop for over 8 years with heavy downloading of all kinds of games and programs and NEVER got exploited via executable memory. My 6 year old son now uses it for games and learning and he wants Windows 8.

There is NO REASON whatsoever that Windows 8 should be blocked from running on this machine. I love MS and all but this is an irrationally bone-headed decision.

I realize it's a rare case and they can afford to do away with support for old hardware in the name of security, but it just rubs me the wrong way cause they've never done this before.

This machine is working FINE, and would run Windows 8 FINE, but now I have to drop $100 or so to replace it with more recent hardware.

  • 3 months later...

Not really true. NX as we currently know it only made it's way into the Pentium 4 range from later iterations of Prescott cores and onwards, which means that all of the Williamette, Northwood, and first iterations of Pentium 4-M, Pentium 4 Mobile, and Gallatin (Pentium 4 Extreme edition) processors have SSE2 but no hardware support for NX, which is well over half of the Pentium 4 range. More specifically the Socket 775 or 5xJ and 5x9J series were the first CPU's to support hardware NX)

That is why I mentioned the Northwood-C.

The Northwood-C series of Pentium 4 CPUs was (unlike Prescott, which would succeed it) entirely socket 478 - however, like Prescott, Northwood-C supported HTT from end to end. (The only previous P4 that wasn't an Extreme Edition to support HTT was the P4 3.06 GHz Northwood-B.)

The Northwood-C was also pretty much a drop-in replacement for older Northwood CPUs (and especially the B) - the issue was making sure your motherboard BIOS was updated.

The tag-team of Northwood-C and DDR had a surprisingly LONG run in the world of Windows - starting with Windows XP, in fact; it took bargain-basement pricing for DDR3 to finally kill off the die-hards as of two years ago. (I have two motherboards with P4 Northwood CPUs - both with AGP slots, in fact - as shelved backups for possible usage in *retro* projects in the future.)

Wow, thanks for making me feel better guys. I was thinking how pathetically old my Opteron 165 system is, and you come in here talking about P4s, haha. Seriously though, you can't really complain about Microsoft when you're trying to use a 10 year old computer. You could upgrade that massively for like $150-200.

Even if you were to get it working somehow someway the experience would be useless since you would have to dumb it down to the point that you would not be able to use the features it presents. The time spent searching cpu's, max ram or even hard drive upgrades to make it work would be a complete waste. If you have bought the upgrade already you have the number code so go to craigslist and get a cheap or affordable windows vista or seven conputer and rerun the upgrade on that. This way you don't lose money on your purchase and you get windows 8 to boot.

Wow, thanks for making me feel better guys. I was thinking how pathetically old my Opteron 165 system is, and you come in here talking about P4s, haha. Seriously though, you can't really complain about Microsoft when you're trying to use a 10 year old computer. You could upgrade that massively for like $150-200.

Why not? I understand SSE2 to an extent but NX is a completely arbitrary requirement. Plenty of CPUs without NX would run Windows 8 just fine. I've never seen any real evidence that NX improves security all that drastically anyway.

it was the upgrade assistant that told me it wasn't compatible. I would try installing it with a flash drive and see what happens but the computer doesn't support booting from usb I dont think and I don't have any blank dvds

(edit)

32bit says cpu not compatible

c'mon MS you jacked up the requirements too much I heard it doesnt even have aero anymore and they go and make the requirement too high I mean tablets haven't even broke the 2ghz mark yet so I don't see how there will be any win 8 tablets

sorry just a rant but this is such a fail on microsofts part

^^ i didnt even get to that part the adviser before setup even began said processor not compatible. It has to be a glitch or this is the most bloated version of windows to date

He's looking for help and all you guys do is come in here and tell him to upgrade, or bash him for no other reason other than to satisfy your own supremacy. None of you ever give thought to maybe he has low income. I would tell him to just use XP, for Windows. But then you guys would come in and bash about a great and not even unsupported (yet) OS.

So he is dammed if he does and dammed if he doesn't. Here is your advice OP: Roll Linux on that rig, Lubuntu to be exact, It's going to do everything you need for that particular machine and it's Modern. You will not have to feel forced to upgrade every time Microsoft tells you to upgrade. For others: Don't bother posting if all you have to contribute is to make the OP feel low and satisfy your need to be a Troll, and I'm not coming back to read abusive comments projected at me, if you got something bad to say about me, meet me somewhere.

The way he approached his question was flawed from the outset. Instead of realizing he has a very outdated system, he decided it was all Microsoft's fault. Quite simply if you want help, behave like an adult.

Same goes for you and your whole "if you got something bad to say about me, meet me somewhere." which is frankly pathetic coming from a grown up.

Why not? I understand SSE2 to an extent but NX is a completely arbitrary requirement. Plenty of CPUs without NX would run Windows 8 just fine. I've never seen any real evidence that NX improves security all that drastically anyway.

The specifics can be up for debate, I'm not saying SSE2 or NX should or shouldn't be necessary, I'm just saying that in the computer world, a computer with a P4 is ancient. I've had a P4 retired in a box for probably about 8 years now. When you can probably build a system that's at least 5 times faster for $150, it's probably time to just do the upgrade. You can debate whether it's fair or not on Microsoft's part, but the argument is entirely and 100 percent useless since you'll never find enough people running systems that old and trying to upgrade to the "latest and greatest" OS. Usually people who are willing to pay for the very latest OS as soon as it comes out are also willing to pay a little to keep their computer at least somewhat up to date. The people who aren't interested in updating their computer usually stick to the OS that came with it like XP which would still run just fine on a P4.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Microsoft Weekly: new Surface, Windows 11 26H2, and more by Taras Buria This week's news recap is here, with Microsoft announcing Windows 11 version 26H2, launching new Surface devices powered by Snapdragon X2 processors, GTA VI preorder date and cover art, fresh Windows 11 preview builds, a quirky phone-sized e-reader with a physical dial, and more. Quick links: Windows 10 and 11 Windows Insider Program Updates are available Reviews are in Gaming news Great deals to check Windows 11 and Windows 10 Here, we talk about everything happening around Microsoft's latest operating system in the Stable channel and preview builds: new features, removed features, controversies, bugs, interesting findings, and more. And, of course, you may find a word or two about older versions. Windows 11 version 26H2 is now official. Alongside Windows 11's new preview builds released this week, Microsoft confirmed version 26H2, which is coming later this year as an enablement package based on the same platform as versions 24H2 and 25H2. A newly published blog post details what IT admins should do to prepare for the upcoming launch. Next, we have new Windows 11 bugs. Users report that this month's security updates for Windows 11 cause all sorts of issues, including BitLocker bugs, OneDrive issues, black screens of death, and third-party integration in Office apps. Microsoft has not confirmed those yet, but it acknowledged other issues with its operating system. What Microsoft has confirmed is a bug where Recycle Bin delete prompts display internal file names instead of actual ones, and a year-old Windows JScript compatibility bug caused by security-focused engine changes. Moving to more positive news, Microsoft and Adobe are working on improving Windows performance in popular creative apps like Photoshop. Thanks to SPGO optimizations, users can expect up to 20% better performance. Finally, we have a few useful articles that can help you recover your PC or make it perform better. For one, we published a guide detailing what to do if your computer cannot boot after a clean Windows 11 install. There are two important steps you can try to get your system back to working in no time. Additionally, there is a more detailed guide on various CPU performance modes that could notably improve performance. Windows Insider Program Here is what Microsoft released for Windows Insiders this week: Builds Canary Channel Builds 28120.2315 and 29613.1000 These two builds include a new built-in audio driver, improvements to audio Settings, and more. Dev Channel Builds 26300.8697 and 26220.8690 Not much is available here. Some File Explorer improvements, Start menu enhancements, bug fixes, and more. However, build 26300.8697 is now officially marked as version 26H2. Updates are available This section covers software, firmware, and other notable updates (released and coming soon) delivering new features, security fixes, improvements, patches, and more from Microsoft and third parties. This week, Microsoft announced its newest Surface devices powered by Qualcomm's latest Snapdragon X2 processors. There is the 12th-gen Surface Pro and the 8th-gen Surface Laptop. Both devices feature little to no visual differences compared to their predecessors from 2024, and most changes hide inside, including a better processor, faster graphics, enhanced NPUs, and more. The Surface Laptop also received a new haptic trackpad. Mozilla is currently working on a major Firefox redesign, and earlier this week, it published a roadmap of upcoming features and highlights of the upcoming "Project Nova" rework. Files, one of the best file managers for Windows 10 and 11, has been updated in the Preview channel with a long-requested feature. Tree View is finally available in version 4.1.4, allowing you to quickly browse deeply nested folders without leaving the main view. In addition, the update improved the Windows Fonts folder, allowing you to preview each font without opening the default viewer. Rufus, another useful Windows 11 utility, also received a notable update. Version 4.15 arrived as beta with important fixes for silent Windows 11 installation. It also includes patches for ARM-based Windows PCs, OneDrive removal improvements, and more. Here are other updates and releases you may find interesting: Microsoft faces shareholder lawsuit over masking AI costs and slowing Azure growth Microsoft now allows you to tweak Visual Studio to new extremes Microsoft brings Planner Agent to all Microsoft 365 Copilot users Microsoft fixes one of Excel Copilot's most frustrating limitations Microsoft will finally let you sign in to Edge with a Google account Here are the latest drivers and firmware updates released this week: NVIDIA 610.62 with support for Empulse and various fixes. Reviews are in Here is the hardware and software we reviewed this week Earlier this week, we reviewed the DuRoBo Krono, a portable, phone-sized e-reader with some interesting physical controls. This device has an Apple Watch-like dial for page turning, frontlight adjustment, and more. Software is simple and no-nonsense, but it also lacks some useful features and customization. Overall, the device proved interesting, but not flawless. On the gaming side Learn about upcoming game releases, Xbox rumors, new hardware, software updates, freebies, deals, discounts, and more. Forza Horizon 6 received two big updates this week. Alongside the Series 2 content update, developers pushed plenty of bug fixes and balancing tweaks. However, they also had to acknowledge the Eliminator CR-farming exploit and shut down the online mode temporarily. Luckily, only a few days later, another fix arrived, which re-enabled Eliminator and patched the exploit. Microsoft announced new games for Game Pass subscribers. Those include EA Sports FC 26, Junkster, Call of Duty: Vanguard, Abyssus, RV There Yet?, and more. Some existing games are leaving the catalog, so be sure to check out the full list here. New games are also available for GeForce NOW subscribers, and they include Embers of the Uncrowned Demo, Aphelion, Megastore Simulator, OPERATOR, Citizen Sleeper, and more. Rockstart Games had plenty of GTA-related news this week. For one, the company gave GTA V players another free update. Those still playing the game on Xbox One and PlayStation 4 are no longer required to pay $40 to upgrade to the latest-gen version. More importantly, Rockstar Games revealed the GTA VI cover art and announced the preorder date. The Epic Games Store is giving away two games: Citizen Sleeper and Roboeat. These two titles are up for grabs until next Thursday, but if they are not up to your taste, you can always check out the latest Weekend PC Game Deal issue, which is usually full of discounts and specials that let you save a lot of money on new games. Great deals to check Every week, we cover many deals on different hardware and software. The following discounts are still available, so check them out. You might find something you want or need. GEEKOM X16 Pro at GEEKOM - $1,119.67 | 17% off Acer 4K Webcam for PC/Mac with All-Metal Unibody Sculpted - $59.99 | 14% off Samsung 990 PRO SSD 2TB - $369.99 | 42% off Nothing Ear Wireless Earbuds Bluetooth - $73.15 | 51% off PowerColor Reaper AMD Radeon RX 9070 16GB - $579.99 | 17% off This link will take you to other issues of the Microsoft Weekly series. You can also support Neowin by registering for a free member account or subscribing for extra member benefits, along with an ad-free tier option.
    • Weekend PC Game Deals: Cyberpunk 2077, Split Fiction, Sonic Racing, and more by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe Weekend PC Game Deals is where the hottest gaming deals from all over the internet are gathered into one place every week for your consumption. So kick back, relax, and hold on to your wallets. The Epic Games store brought along two games from wildly different genres this week for PC gamers to claim. Robobeat is a rhythm-based action game that lets you become a bounty hunter that can wall run, slide, and bunny hop around his opponents. All you have to do is stick to the beat for the built-in or custom songs. Next, Citizen Sleeper is a sci-fi RPG adventure taking place in a ruined space station. It uses tabletop RPG-inspired elements like dice rolls and timers to change up how players approach its activities, factions, and storylines. The Citizen Sleeper and Robobeat giveaways end on June 25. On the same day, RollerCoaster Tycoon 3 and Voidwrought will become the next freebies. The bundle space expanded with two more collections from Humble this week too. The June 2unes bundle is up first, carrying plenty of rhythm games. This carries Kill the Music and Rhythm Witch in the $5 starting tier, followed by Trombone Champ, Spin Rhythm XD, and Thumper in the $7 tier. Paying at least $12 gets you the complete bundle, which adds on Kalpa: Cosmic Symphony, Everhood 2, NOISZ, and Sixtar Gate: StarTrail. The next bundle is for virtual reality fans. This carries Among Us 3D: VR and Zero Caliber VR for $10. The next tier brings in Tactical Assault VR, Ancient Dungeon, and Arizona Sunshine Remake for $15. VTOL VR, Zero Caliber 2 Remastered, Metro Awakening, and Thief VR land to finish things off for $18. Free Events It's a big week for free event fans, as Valve kicked off another one of its Next Fest events. This one carries thousands of gameplay slices from upcoming indie games The promotion is set to run until June 22. Standard free events are also ongoing this weekend. This includes the sci-fi grand strategy experience Stellaris from Paradox and the hit SEGA management game Two Point Museum. Asymmetric multiplayer horror title Dead by Daylight and the hit mech shooter MechWarrior 5: Mercenaries are also free-to-play over the weekend. Big Deals The Steam Summer Sale is a week away from launch, but there are plenty of publishers already putting their wares on sale to prepare for the event. Here's our hand-picked big deals list for this weekend: Battlefield 6 – $34.99 on Steam Sonic Racing: CrossWorlds – $34.99 on Steam Split Fiction – $32.49 on Steam Arma Reforger – $27.99 on Steam Sniper Elite: Resistance – $24.99 on Steam DayZ – $22.49 on Steam Two Point Museum – $20.09 on Steam Atomfall – $19.99 on Steam No More Room in Hell 2 – $19.49 on Steam Cyberpunk 2077 – $17.99 on Steam Sonic Frontiers – $17.99 on Steam Dinkum – $15.99 on Steam Stellaris – $14.99 on Steam Hi-Fi RUSH – $14.99 on Steam My Little Puppy – $14.99 on Steam FINAL FANTASY XII THE ZODIAC AGE – $14.99 on Steam SONIC X SHADOW GENERATIONS – $14.99 on Steam EA SPORTS FC 26 – $13.99 on Steam STAR WARS Jedi: Survivor – $13.99 on Steam FINAL FANTASY VII REMAKE INTERGRADE – $13.99 on Steam FINAL FANTASY XV – $13.99 on Steam It Takes Two – $11.99 on Steam FINAL FANTASY X/X-2 HD Remaster – $11.99 on Steam Axiom Verge 2 – $9.99 on Steam [REDACTED] – $9.99 on Steam Sniper Elite 5 – $9.99 on Steam Holdfast: Nations At War – $9.99 on Steam Arma 3 – $8.99 on Steam The Callisto Protocol – $8.99 on Steam A Way Out – $8.99 on Steam LIGHTNING RETURNS: FINAL FANTASY XIII – $7.99 on Steam MechWarrior 5: Mercenaries – $7.49 on Steam Slackers - Carts of Glory – $7.14 on Steam MIMESIS – $6.99 on Steam Need for Speed Unbound – $6.99 on Steam FINAL FANTASY XIII – $6.39 on Steam Sniper Elite 4 – $5.99 on Steam Tyranny – $5.99 on Steam Immortals of Aveum – $5.99 on Steam Far Cry 3 – $4.99 on Steam Zombie Army 4: Dead War – $4.99 on Steam Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed Collection – $4.99 on Steam Mass Effect Legendary Edition – $4.79 on Steam Titanfall 2 – $4.49 on Steam SimCity 4 Deluxe Edition – $3.99 on Steam Far Cry 3 - Blood Dragon – $3.74 on Steam Wreckfest – $2.99 on Steam Crime Boss: Rockay City – $1.99 on Steam theHunter: Call of the Wild – $1.99 on Steam The Saboteur – $1.99 on Steam Battlefield 1 – $1.99 on Steam Sonic Mania – $1.99 on Steam Golf With Your Friends – $1.49 on Steam Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri Planetary Pack – $0.99 on Steam Dungeon Keeper 2 – $0.99 on Steam Populous: The Beginning – $0.99 on Steam Citizen Sleeper – $0 on Epic Store ROBOBEAT – $0 on Epic Store DRM-free Specials The DRM-free store GOG has already kicked off its own summer sale. Here are some highlights: S.T.A.L.K.E.R. 2: Heart of Chornobyl - $41.99 on GOG Indiana Jones and the Great Circle - $41.99 on GOG Cronos: The New Dawn - $35.99 on GOG SILENT HILL 2 - $34.99 on GOG SILENT HILL f - $34.99 on GOG Kingdom Come: Deliverance II - $29.99 on GOG MENACE - $29.99 on GOG Cairn - $23.99 on GOG Frostpunk 2 - $22.49 on GOG The Alters - $20.99 on GOG Resident Evil Classic Bundle - $20.99 on GOG System Shock 2: 25th Anniversary Remaster - $17.99 on GOG Banishers: Ghosts of New Eden - $16.99 on GOG Legacy of Kain: Defiance Remastered - $16.25 on GOG METAL EDEN - $15.99 on GOG REPLACED - $15.99 on GOG Hollow Knight: Silksong - $14.99 on GOG Tomb Raider I-III Remastered Starring Lara Croft - $11.99 on GOG Chants of Sennaar - $11.99 on GOG Alpha Protocol - $9.99 on GOG DREDGE - $9.99 on GOG Crow Country - $9.99 on GOG Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War - Anniversary Edition - $2.99 on GOG Keep in mind that availability and pricing for some deals could vary depending on the region. That's it for our pick of this weekend's PC game deals, and hopefully, some of you have enough self-restraint not to keep adding to your ever-growing backlogs. As always, there are an enormous number of other deals ready and waiting all over the interwebs, as well as on services you may already subscribe to if you comb through them, so keep your eyes open for those, and have a great weekend.
    • Lilly-Livered American Media Are Scared
    • Really? Despite the memory price rises, nothing can kill it? I thought something would.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Genuinetonerink- Dubai earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Genuinetonerink- Dubai earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Year In
      hhgygy earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Month Later
      AMV earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      AMV earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      514
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      171
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      84
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      74
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      72
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!