Before you want to know your system requirements you have to get your Windows 10 for free or You can buy it from Microsoft.
Currently you can get Windows 10 in three ways.
1. You can free upgrade from Windows 7 , Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 to Windows 10.
2. You can get from Windows store as ISO format Disc.
3. You can directly download latest Windows 10 from Microsoft online store.
We have tried Windows 10 on Gigabyte S series with 4GB ram and 2GHz Intel Dual core processor. It's running very smoothly.
To enable cortana and other features you should use Windows mail like live or hotmail.
As company says minimum requirement fro Windows 10 is just need
1 gigahertz (GHz) or faster processor and 1GB RAM.
It is minimum basic Processor speed now a days.
DirectX 9 or later with WDDM 1.0 driver
What is DirectX9 ?
Display 800 x 600
Go through this link for More info : Link for Specifications
Currently you can get Windows 10 in three ways.
1. You can free upgrade from Windows 7 , Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 to Windows 10.
2. You can get from Windows store as ISO format Disc.
3. You can directly download latest Windows 10 from Microsoft online store.
We have tried Windows 10 on Gigabyte S series with 4GB ram and 2GHz Intel Dual core processor. It's running very smoothly.
To enable cortana and other features you should use Windows mail like live or hotmail.
As company says minimum requirement fro Windows 10 is just need
1 gigahertz (GHz) or faster processor and 1GB RAM.
It is minimum basic Processor speed now a days.
DirectX 9 or later with WDDM 1.0 driver
What is DirectX9 ?
Direct x 9c was released in August 2004. Thats 8 years ago.Source : Microsoft Community
Unless you have really, really old hardware you could safely assume they are direct x 9 compliant.
To actually check there is no easy way. The card will not tell you if it is compliant. DXDIAG only tells you the version installed not what the card is capable of though this could be used to determine somethings.
Use wmi to get model name and check with vendor
Powershell
$video = Get-WmiObject -Class win32_videocontroller -ComputerName somename
$video.VideoProcessor --returns the name of the device
Display 800 x 600
Go through this link for More info : Link for Specifications

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