Xtreme.liteos.11.x64.iso

I tried to pair my Bluetooth headphones. The Bluetooth stack worked, but the "Audio Device Manager" GUI was missing. I had to use DeviceConsole via PowerShell to manually pair.

I tried to install Visual Studio Code. It worked, but the integrated terminal threw a cryptic error about a missing conhost.exe dependency. Xtreme.LiteOS.11.x64.iso

The mouse moved with a snappiness that is impossible to describe. It felt like the OS was a lightswitch rather than a swamp. Applications launched before the animation finished playing. For a gamer or a DAW user (Digital Audio Workstation), this is the holy grail. The DPC latency (a measure of how long it takes the system to respond to hardware interrupts) was lower than anything I’ve seen on a bare-metal Linux install. What did Xtreme actually do ? I tried to pair my Bluetooth headphones

This means you are running on a snapshot of Windows 11 from the date the ISO was compiled. If a zero-day RCE exploit is discovered next week (and it will be), you are exposed. No Patch Tuesday. No security backports. I tried to install Visual Studio Code

Task Manager revealed the lie we’ve all been living with. On a stock Windows 11 Pro install, even after debloating scripts, you hover around 90-110 background processes. Xtreme LiteOS? Memory usage at idle: 1.1GB.

After a clean install on an NVMe drive (Intel 12th gen, 32GB RAM, RTX 3080), the boot time was surreal. From POST to desktop: 4 seconds.