Jump to content

Windows 10 support for Legacy Intel CPUs

Filingo

Hello,

 

I was told that Windows 10 support for Core 2 Quads has stopped.


but I just installed Windows 10 64 bit on a Pentium E5400 which was not supposed to be supported according to this table:
Does My Intel(R) Processor Support Microsoft Windows(R) 10?

It's Wolfdale and it worked with build 1809. What does it mean? Because I want to "upgrade" to a Core 2 Quad q9450 instead of the E5400 but I don't know how long will I be able to install Windows 10 on this machine, or maybe Windows 10 supports them up to build 1809?

Thanks

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Why do you want to get a Core 2 Quad.

F@H [] Autobiography [] 

 

Main Desktop and Folding Rig :

Spoiler

Cpu : I5-9400f

Gpu : GTX 1070 Founder's Edition
Psu : Seasonic G-650

Ram : G.Skill Aegis 4x8gb DDR4 2666MHz (14-15-15-34)

External Storage : 8tb Western Digital Elements Usb 3.0 Hard Drive

Storage : Samsung 970 Evo 500GB

Motherboard : ASUS B365 Pro-4 m

 

 

Gaming Laptop :

Spoiler

Cpu : I7-8750H 2.2ghz 

Gpu : GTX 1070 Max Q 

Psu : laptop b r i c k 

Ram : 16gb 2666Mhz 

Storage : 512Gb SATA SSD 

Motherboard : it's a laptop.....

 

 

old boomer (currently non-functional)

Spoiler

Cpu : I5-6400 2.7ghz (doesn't have a heatsink)

Gpu : Asus RX580 8gb (might sell)

Psu : EVGA 500 watt 80 plus

Ram : 16gb DDR3 1400mhz

Storage : 1tb Toshiba HDD (currently in main pc)

Motherboard : Generic ASUS pre-built motherboard

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Just now, Tika said:

Why do you want to get a Core 2 Quad.

I have an old machine and I put an SSD there and now I just want to put a Core 2 Quad and a GPU to connect to a non-smart television via HDMI

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

important note: this is about driver support, not about running at all.

 

there's some processor families that dont work at all with windows 10, you're just running on a platform that lacks optimizations to run things properly.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Just now, Filingo said:

I have an old machine and I put an SSD there and now I just want to put a Core 2 Quad and a GPU to connect to a non-smart television via HDMI

Could a Raspberry Pi just substitute? Or run the PC with Linux?

F@H [] Autobiography [] 

 

Main Desktop and Folding Rig :

Spoiler

Cpu : I5-9400f

Gpu : GTX 1070 Founder's Edition
Psu : Seasonic G-650

Ram : G.Skill Aegis 4x8gb DDR4 2666MHz (14-15-15-34)

External Storage : 8tb Western Digital Elements Usb 3.0 Hard Drive

Storage : Samsung 970 Evo 500GB

Motherboard : ASUS B365 Pro-4 m

 

 

Gaming Laptop :

Spoiler

Cpu : I7-8750H 2.2ghz 

Gpu : GTX 1070 Max Q 

Psu : laptop b r i c k 

Ram : 16gb 2666Mhz 

Storage : 512Gb SATA SSD 

Motherboard : it's a laptop.....

 

 

old boomer (currently non-functional)

Spoiler

Cpu : I5-6400 2.7ghz (doesn't have a heatsink)

Gpu : Asus RX580 8gb (might sell)

Psu : EVGA 500 watt 80 plus

Ram : 16gb DDR3 1400mhz

Storage : 1tb Toshiba HDD (currently in main pc)

Motherboard : Generic ASUS pre-built motherboard

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

I have a Q6600 that runs Windows 10 off a 60gb ssd and had 1x4GB DDR3 until I realized that and stuck a random 2gb dimm into it the other day when I swapped out the 10+ year old Thermaltake TR2. It boots to desktop in 15 seconds from pressing the power button and is overall a joy to use over a bunch of low end systems I've had. It just took the 20H1 update after I swapped the PSU.

 

LGA775 is great for a basic web browsing computer, the largest issue I've found with it is that it doesn't support audio passthrough in chrome for chromecasting tabs. I had to stick a HD5450 into it though for Windows 10 support, the HD4530 or whatever used to be in it seemed to have support dropped for it. There's far more modern gpus that are much more capable and something newer that would come with modern codec support would likely be a really good pairing for it.

 

That Intel chart just looks like a chart that indicates which CPUs they will ship microcodes to Microsoft for. Don't worry about it, Intel only even pushed updates for anything pre-Haswell just for Spectre mitigation as they don't manufacture anything that old anymore.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

×