微软删除了在 Windows 11 中切换到本地帐户的文档
Microsoft removes documentation for switching to a local account in Windows 11

原始链接: https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/06/microsoft-removes-documentation-for-switching-to-a-local-account-in-windows-11/

Windows 11 引入了一项新策略,家庭版和专业版都要求用户在安装过程中使用 Microsoft 帐户登录。 虽然这提供了访问 OneDrive、Xbox Game Pass 和 Microsoft 365 等服务等优势,但许多用户可能出于隐私原因或仅仅因为他们不使用这些特定的 Microsoft 产品而更喜欢本地帐户。 不幸的是,微软不再提供初始设置后设置本地帐户的明确说明。 此前,他们的支持页面详细介绍了该过程。 然而,最近的更新删除了这些步骤。 现在,存在建立本地帐户的方法,包括在安装过程中使用命令提示符或使用第三方工具。 这些方法适用于所有 Windows 11 变体。 然而,微软坚持使用微软帐户标志着背离行业标准,因为苹果和谷歌等竞争对手提供了无需帐户要求即可完成设置的选项。

Fedora Atomic 是一个稳定可靠的基础操作系统,与 Distrobox 有效结合,提供了先进的开发环境和易用性。 这是一个快速概述: 借助 Fedora Atomic,您可以获得一个具有 Chrome 操作系统稳定性和反熵特性的操作系统,同时还能够通过创建自定义图像或采用可逆覆盖来实现个性化。 其均衡的更新计划提供及时的软件升级(不包括主要版本),确保兼容性和测试。 Distrobox 通过支持创建容纳不同 Linux 发行版的容器化环境来补充此设置。 这些容器与主机系统顺利合并,授予对硬件设备、主目录等共享资源的访问权限,并能够轻松导出应用程序。 通过使用 Distrobox 以及 PyTaxis 和 BoxBuddy-rs 等相关管理工具,开发人员可以在稳定的基础系统旁边维护灵活的容器化环境。 实现此方法的关键点包括利用预配置的映像,例如 Universal Blue,而不是普通的 Fedora Atomic,因为它的配置过程无忧无虑。 此外,在通过 rpm-ostree 层添加系统组件时要小心,将基本应用程序保留在这些容器中,而不是将它们与核心系统交织在一起以获得最佳效率。
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原文
A laptop PC running Windows 11 sitting next to a coffee mug.
Enlarge / A PC running Windows 11.

Microsoft

One of Windows 11's more contentious changes is that, by default, both the Home and Pro editions of the operating system require users to sign in with a Microsoft account during setup. Signing in with an account does get you some benefits, at least if you're a regular user of other Microsoft products like OneDrive, GamePass, or Microsoft 365 (aka Office). But if you don't use those services, a lot of what a Microsoft account gets you in Windows 11 is repeated ads and reminders about signing up for those services. Using Windows with a traditional local account is still extremely possible, but it does require a small amount of know-how beyond just clicking the right buttons.

On the know-how front, Microsoft has taken one more minor, but nevertheless irritating, step away from allowing users to sign in with local accounts. This official Microsoft support page walks users with local accounts through the process of signing in to a Microsoft account. As recently as June 12, that page also included instructions for converting a Microsoft account into a local account. But according to Tom's Hardware and the Internet Wayback Machine, those instructions disappeared on or around June 17 and haven't been seen since.

Despite the documentation change, most of the workarounds for creating a local account still work in both Windows 11 23H2 (the publicly available version of Windows 11 for most PCs) and 24H2 (available now on Copilot+ PCs, later this fall for everyone else). The easiest way to do it on a PC you just took out of the box is to press Shift+F10 during the setup process to bring up a command prompt window, typing OOBE\BYPASSNRO, rebooting, and then clicking the "I don't have Internet" button when asked to connect to a Wi-Fi network.

Other workarounds include using the Rufus tool to create a USB installer that will automatically bypass the Microsoft account sign-in requirement, or (for Windows 11 Pro users) indicating that you want to join the PC to a corporate domain and then not actually joining it to a domain. Setting the PC up with a Microsoft account and then signing out afterward is also still an option.

There is one workaround that has allegedly stopped working—it used to be that trying to "sign in" with a nonexistent email account would get you a local sign-in option. But as of earlier this month, according to Windows Central editor Zac Bowden, it looks like the Windows 11 setup screen will just ask you to try another email address instead.

To be fair to Microsoft, all the big tech companies want you to sign in with an account before you can use all the features of the software, but neither Apple nor Google goes as far as to mandate account sign-in to access basic functionality. Macs, iPhones, and iPads will all let you complete the setup process without signing in, though you do have to know which buttons to click. Google will allow you to use Chromebooks in guest mode, and Android phones and tablets are still usable without signing in (though this does make it more difficult to find and install apps). Microsoft's pushiness remains unique; there's definitely a difference between a company that would really prefer that you sign in and one that forces you to.

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