Windows 11 has some pretty strict hardware requirements that have made it difficult for many to upgrade from Windows 10. TPM 2.0, Secure Boot, and a relatively modern CPU are among them, and Microsoft has been firm about them. But a modder going by "Omores" has now decided to call that bluff, getting Windows 11 running on a platform from the early 2000s powered by DDR1 memory.
The system is built around an ASRock ConRoe865PE motherboard with an Intel i865PE chipset, a board regarded as something of a legend among hardware collectors for bridging generations. It allowed users to run Intel Core 2 Duo and Core 2 Quad processors while keeping DDR1 memory and AGP graphics. Omores took advantage of exactly that flexibility, pairing the board with an Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600, a 65nm quad-core CPU that gives the platform enough grunt to be genuinely usable.
The GPU situation required the most work. The system uses an ATI Radeon HD 4650 AGP graphics card, and getting AGP acceleration working on Windows 11 meant hunting down Windows 7 64-bit ATI drivers from 2012 and forcing them onto the system with a custom INF file. The effort paid off, with AGP 8X fully functional and H.264 hardware decoding active. The system also boots from a Toshiba SATA SSD.
Omores verified the setup using CPU-Z and GPU-Z to confirm the results, then showed the system running modern browsers, streaming video with hardware decoding, and passing 3D benchmarks. It also ran Crysis and Half-Life 2 without graphical issues or crashes. "The best part," Omores said. "It's completely stable."

That being said, the system runs without UEFI and uses only ACPI 1.1, which would normally rule out Windows 11. The workaround here is Windows 11 IoT, which officially supports BIOS-based systems. As Omores put it, "Windows 11 is rock stable on these older systems with no UEFI whatsoever."




