Ironically, the first look anyone gets at Windows 11 itself right now is the dreaded BSOU (Blue Screen Of Updates)-after flighting our Windows 10 VM into the Dev channel and one very quick download, it rebooted. Although one of our test VMs is a "daily driver" we rely on, it's sitting on top of a ZFS dataset-and we took a manual snapshot prior to the upgrade, for easy rollback. We had no real problems updating either a well-used Windows 10 VM or a brand-new one-but we strongly advise against upgrading to Windows 11 on a machine or VM that matters to you, unless you have a guaranteed method of recovery you both trust and are prepared to use. (If you're not already on Windows 10 20H2 or newer, you'll need to get through that upgrade first.) To install Windows 11 Build 22000.51, you must begin with a fully patched and up-to-date Windows 10 installation, then flight it into the Dev channel, then upgrade it to Windows 11 via Windows Update. The first disappointment we encountered with Windows 11 is a puzzling one-it can't (yet) be cleanly installed as a new operating system.
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