Arm64 - Tiny10
What or virtual machine are you planning to install this on?
For weeks, he worked with the precision of a watchmaker. He took the skeleton of Windows 10 and began a process of digital surgery known to the underground as the "Tiny" protocol. He stripped away the telemetry—the invisible eyes that watched every click. He removed the "bloatware"—the colorful apps for games and services that no one had asked for. He pruned the background services until only the absolute vitals remained: the heartbeat of the kernel and the lungs of the file system. He called his creation . tiny10 arm64
However, whispers on forums suggest NTDEV is experimenting with a Tiny11 ARM64 based on the Windows 11 24H2 LTSC preview. If released, it would likely drop support for older ARMv8.0 CPUs (Snapdragon 835/850), requiring ARMv8.1 or newer. What or virtual machine are you planning to install this on
Unlike x86 PCs, ARM64 devices don't have a unified boot standard. A Tiny10 image that boots on a Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3 laptop may fail on a Raspberry Pi due to missing UEFI firmware, different interrupt controllers, or GPU drivers (Adreno vs. Broadcom VideoCore). He stripped away the telemetry—the invisible eyes that
Give your ARM device a second life with Tiny10! 🚀
Background data collection, tracking, and Microsoft reporting services are stripped out to improve privacy and performance.
Before understanding its Arm variant, one must appreciate the original Tiny10. Created by a developer known as NTDev, Tiny10 is not an official Microsoft product. It is a modified version of Windows 10, achieved through a process called "component removal" (often using tools like NTLite). The goal is radical: remove every non-essential feature—Edge browser, Windows Media Player, print spooling, parental controls, even the Windows Update agent—to produce an OS that consumes under 10 GB of storage and idles with less than 2 GB of RAM.