Windows 7 Ultimate Super Slim Edition X64 June 2019 New

Testing was done on a Dell Latitude E6440 (Intel i5-4300M, 4GB DDR3, 5400rpm HDD).

| Task | Standard Win7 SP1 x64 | Super Slim x64 (June 2019) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Boot to Desktop (SSD) | 38 seconds | 19 seconds | | Boot to Desktop (HDD) | 2 minutes | 48 seconds | | RAM usage at idle | 1.4 GB | 320 MB | | Processes running | 78 | 32 | | Shutdown time | 12 seconds | 4 seconds |

The difference is staggering. On a Pentium Dual-Core with 2GB of RAM, this edition transforms a doorstop into a usable word processor and media player. windows 7 ultimate super slim edition x64 june 2019 new

While no single report exists for this exact ISO, similar slim editions show detections for:

Note: Some defenders incorrectly mark all loaders as malware; however, with unsigned slim ISOs, the rule is: never trust unknown modifications. Testing was done on a Dell Latitude E6440

You install this OS for one reason only: Old hardware revival. Here is what this edition demands vs. standard Windows 10:

| Component | Standard Windows 10 (22H2) | Win 7 Super Slim x64 (June 2019) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | CPU | 1GHz, 2 cores (unusable on old C2D) | Intel Core 2 Duo (Smooth on Pentium 4) | | RAM | 4GB (Sluggish) / 8GB (Ideal) | 512MB (Minimum) / 2GB (Ideal) | | Storage | 32GB (Cramped) | 6GB (Comfortable) | | VRAM | Required for UI effects | Runs on integrated Intel GMA 950 | Note: Some defenders incorrectly mark all loaders as

This is the most important section. Windows 7 is End of Life. This "Super Slim" edition is even more vulnerable because:

Recommendation: If you use this, treat it as an air-gapped machine (no internet) or a retro gaming console. Never enter credit card details, banking, or personal email on this OS.

"Windows 7 Ultimate Super Slim Edition x64 (June 2019)" is not an official Microsoft product. It is a custom-modified, unofficial build created by an unknown third-party group. While it promises a lightweight, fast, and debloated version of Windows 7, using such an image poses severe security, stability, and legal risks. Microsoft ended mainstream support for Windows 7 in January 2015 and extended support (security updates) in January 2020. This “June 2019” release date suggests it was assembled shortly before the end of extended support, but it is not a legitimate Microsoft release.