This tutorial walks you through what “Windows 11 Pro Raven OS Extreme Lite 24H2 26100” likely refers to, how to prepare for it, how to install/configure a lightweight/customized Windows 11 Pro build, and tips to get the best performance and stability while keeping features you need. I assume you want an optimized, minimal Windows 11 Pro experience based on the 24H2 (build 26100) baseline; if you meant something else, this tutorial still maps to building or using a slimmed, high-performance Windows 11 image.

: Native support for creating 7-Zip and TAR archives in File Explorer and the introduction of "Sudo for Windows" for command-line efficiency. What Makes "Raven OS Extreme Lite" Different?

A scrollable and customizable list of settings in the system tray.

Here is where the "Raven" metaphor turns from a sleek bird to an omen. Downloading and using is legally and technically a grey area.

Standard Windows 11 requires a minimum of 4GB of RAM, roughly 20GB to 30GB of storage space, a compatible 64-bit processor, and active TPM 2.0 / Secure Boot hardware chips.

Custom ISOs cannot be fully verified. Users must trust that the developer did not inject malicious scripts or backdoors into the image. Furthermore, disabling automatic updates leaves the system exposed to newly discovered zero-day exploits.

Install your official GPU, chipset, and network drivers immediately after hitting the desktop to ensure hardware stability. If you are planning an installation, tell me:

If you just want a faster Windows 11, try a first – you’ll likely get 90% of the speed with 100% of the security.

: The mandatory requirement to log in with a live Microsoft account is skipped. The system defaults to building a fast, local user profile directly on setup.

If the Xbox app frameworks and Microsoft Store are completely ripped out, you will not be able to play games purchased through the Xbox App or use Game Pass. Summary: Should You Install It?