![]() Starting up the WoR-Flasher script takes just two terminal commands, and a handy GUI guides you through the Windows download and installation process. You will need a USB drive that’s 8GB or larger to create the Windows install media, though. Well, it looks like there is no way to do it from the SD card, but because I installed Windows IoT, there is a built-in FTP and file sharing server. The whole process happens within your Debian-based Linux distribution (the default Raspberry Pi OS works), so you don’t need a Windows PC to put Windows on your Raspberry Pi. WoR-Flasher downloads a Windows installation directly from Microsoft’s servers (so it’s perfectly legal) and flashes it to your SD card. ![]() A new script called WoR-Flasher does the job in a jiffy, opening the door to experimentation or app building for Windows on ARM. But after a ton of small milestones, there’s finally an easy way to get Windows 10 or Windows 11 on your Pi. Installing Windows 10 on a Raspberry Pi SD card was impossible just one year ago.
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