Removing “unnecessary” features often breaks things in unexpected ways. For example:
You do not need an illegal “Lite” edition. Microsoft and the community provide safe, supported methods to achieve a lean Windows 10. If you still want me to write a
If you’re looking for a lightweight, official Windows experience, I’d be glad to write a detailed, safe article on the following topics instead: before RDP exploits like BlueKeep (2019)
If you still want me to write a critical/educational article explaining why the file you mentioned is dangerous and how to avoid such modified ISOs, I can do that too. consider Linux Lite
Just let me know which direction you prefer.
Build 15063.483 is from May 2017 – that’s before the Spectre/Meltdown patches (2018), before RDP exploits like BlueKeep (2019), and before countless zero-days. Connecting such a system to the internet would be catastrophic.
If your hardware struggles with Windows, consider Linux Lite, Lubuntu, or Zorin OS Lite. They are free, secure, and run well on 2 GB RAM.