Press the green flag and click or press space to go through the slides. Anyhow, here are my personal steps I took: 1. Made an exact copy of a Windows 7 VM I had so I could keep my Windows 7 VM while also upgrading to 10 for free (still works. There's several ways to do it.) 2. Plugged in my Windows 10 Install drive I left lying around. (I didn't want to waste precious internet bandwidth.) 3. Spent hours trying to boot off it in Virtualbox until I finally realized I could just run the setup executable from 7. 4. Run setup and upgraded from 7 to Windows 10 version 1809 (which was what the drive had). 5. Used an update package to upgrade to 21H1. 6. Looped between registry hacks and forums (knew what I was doing. There was no risk because it was a VM.) trying to enroll in the insider program. 7. Finally took someone's advice and reset 10, purging any glitches from the 7 upgrade. 8. Set up 10. Turned off the internet in the WM so I could use an offline account in case online messed with Windows Insider. 9. Got really confused why Insider still wasn't working. 10. Realized I had turned internet off and turned it back on. 11. (Haha) Enrolled in the Insider program with the Dev channel. 12. Ran Windows update, and 11 started to download! ? 13. Took a couple Windows-in-Windows screenshots and waited for download and installer. (No, I don't run 7 on my main. Just good at theming 10 with open shell and turning on Aero Lite theme. Might switch to Linux some day. I really like it. I just a bit of spare time, and now is not it for several reasons.)
Not a tutorial. Just for fun. Do your own research. Don't take random people on the internet's word for it or make shady downloads. If you thought this was a simulator, it is not. But here is a simulator I am working on: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/544851591/ Never use your main PC or even slightly important PC. Insider builds have glitches, and not just simple ones. Don't trust random downloads or people on the internet. Yes, the leak was real, but people could sneak viruses into the ISO. It's pretty easy. Partly made with Windows 11. Credit to Microsoft for developing Windows whether or not I like its business practices. (Oh, come on, TPM 2.0! 8th gen Intel/2nd Gen AMD. Those processors are still recent! I get 4 GB because anyone still making anything less than that should be arrested, and any SSD/HDD smaller than 64 GB is rare, but TPM really only started being adopted recently.) Credit to https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/1/14/Windows_logo_-_2006.svg for Win7 logo.