Is there any way around this? Why is Windows doing this? Don’t get me wrong, I got the laptop to install a Linux distro anyway, but it’s helpful for others (especially my older family members) to just use Windows when they need to print a paper or do a small task, so I would have liked to keep it. Microsoft really lost me here.

Edit:

Thanks everyone for the answers. For reasons I will not delve into now, I ended up installing Windows 10 from the official iso Image, then upgrading to Windows 11. This is the longest and shittiest way to avoid the login as it simply used the local account I created on Windows 10, and that’s the road I took (not recommended). Also I ended up installing Mint with dual boot and I love it. I have windows on the smallest partition size possible (about 66G).

  • Dojan
    link
    English
    41 year ago

    That’s “login alternatives” not “skip for now.”

    • @ziggurism
      link
      English
      11 year ago

      I’m not looking for a literal translation. I’m looking for the one that lets you create a local login without a Microsoft account. Login alternatives.

      • ???OP
        link
        English
        11 year ago

        That one does not let you not log in. It just offers some alternatives.

        • @ziggurism
          link
          English
          11 year ago

          In my experience, local account is one of the alternatives

          • ???OP
            link
            English
            11 year ago

            Sadly I’m passed the point of that screen now. However, my partner is getting a new laptop too and the one he chose also has Windows 11 installed. We will try to click that and see, and I can update the thread here. Though I can’t recall exactly, but clicking that did not give me an option for a local account.

          • ???OP
            link
            English
            111 months ago

            So my partner finally got his device. I tried clicking that and a local account is not an option anymore.