comptia-a-plus-core2/notes/OS-1-windows-editions-system-info.md

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OS-1: Windows Editions and System Information

Status: studying

Domain:

  • 1.0 Operating Systems

Objective alignment:

  • 1.3 Windows editions and requirements
  • 1.5 Windows command-line/system information basics

What You Need To Know

Windows comes in different editions. For A+ Core 2, focus on what features separate home-user editions from business editions.

Common exam distinction:

  • Windows Home: basic consumer edition.
  • Windows Pro: adds business features such as joining a domain, BitLocker, Remote Desktop host, Group Policy tools, and Hyper-V support.
  • Windows Pro for Workstations: high-end workstation edition with expanded CPU/RAM/storage feature support.
  • Windows Enterprise/Education: organization-managed editions with more advanced deployment and security controls.

The exam often asks which edition is needed for a business feature. If the feature sounds like centralized management, encryption, domain access, or remote administration, think Pro or higher.

Windows 11 requirement clues:

  • TPM 2.0: security chip/firmware feature used by Windows security features.
  • UEFI: modern firmware replacement for legacy BIOS.
  • Secure Boot: helps prevent untrusted boot loaders from starting before the OS.

Exam shortcut:

  • If the question says a PC cannot upgrade to Windows 11, check TPM 2.0, UEFI, Secure Boot capability, CPU/RAM/storage, and edition compatibility.

Memory Trick

Remember: Pro = Professional workplace features.

The "PRO" clue:

  • Policies: Group Policy management
  • Remote Desktop host
  • Organization login: domain join / business identity features

BitLocker also belongs in the "workplace/security" bucket, so associate it with Pro or higher.

Commands To Enter

Enter these on Windows PowerShell or Command Prompt:

winver

What it does:

  • Opens a Windows dialog showing the Windows version and build.
  • Use it when you need a fast human-readable version check.
systeminfo

What it does:

  • Prints detailed system information.
  • Useful fields include OS Name, OS Version, System Type, BIOS Version, Total Physical Memory, and install date.
hostname

What it does:

  • Shows the computer name.
  • Useful when documenting a device or confirming you are connected to the right machine.
whoami

What it does:

  • Shows the currently signed-in user.
  • Useful when checking whether you are using the expected account.
wmic os get caption,version,buildnumber,osarchitecture

What it does:

  • Shows Windows edition, version, build number, and whether the OS is 32-bit or 64-bit.
  • WMIC is older, but it still appears in exam-style command questions.
tpm.msc

What it does:

  • Opens TPM Management.
  • Use it to check TPM status and version on Windows.
msinfo32

What it does:

  • Opens System Information.
  • Use it to check BIOS Mode, Secure Boot State, system model, CPU, RAM, and OS details.

Enter these on Linux:

hostname

What it does:

  • Shows the Linux system's host name.
whoami

What it does:

  • Shows the current logged-in user.
uname -a

What it does:

  • Shows kernel and architecture information.
  • Useful for identifying whether the system is 64-bit and what kernel it is running.
cat /etc/os-release

What it does:

  • Shows the Linux distribution name and version.
  • This is one of the quickest ways to identify the Linux OS.

Mini Lab

Goal:

  • Identify and document your system's OS edition/version, architecture, host name, current user, CPU, and RAM.

On Windows:

  1. Run winver.
  2. Run systeminfo.
  3. Run hostname.
  4. Run whoami.
  5. Run msinfo32.
  6. Optional: run tpm.msc.
  7. Record:
    • Windows edition
    • Version/build
    • 32-bit or 64-bit
    • Host name
    • Current user
    • Installed RAM
    • BIOS mode
    • Secure Boot state
    • TPM version/status, if available

On Linux:

  1. Run cat /etc/os-release.
  2. Run uname -a.
  3. Run hostname.
  4. Run whoami.
  5. Optional: run free -h to view memory.
  6. Record:
    • Distribution
    • Kernel
    • 32-bit or 64-bit architecture
    • Host name
    • Current user
    • Installed/available memory

Quick Check Before Quiz

You are ready for the OS-1 quiz when you can answer these without looking:

  • Which edition is usually needed for domain join and Group Policy?
  • Which command quickly displays Windows version/build in a GUI dialog?
  • Which command gives detailed Windows inventory information?
  • Which Linux file commonly identifies the distribution?
  • Which Windows 11 upgrade clues point to firmware/security requirements?