: Often includes manufacturer Wi-Fi and chipset drivers to ensure immediate connectivity on older laptops. Critical Usage Considerations No Official Support

While the performance gains are enticing, installing a modified, third-party operating system comes with severe security and stability risks. 1. Security Vulnerabilities

To achieve a "Super Slim" status, modifiers aggressively strip out non-critical features. In a typical Ultimate Slim build, the following components are purged:

The "Super Slim" tag means this version is intentionally stripped of bloatware, unnecessary drivers, and sometimes, background services that most casual users do not need, resulting in a very low memory footprint. Key Features and Optimizations (June 2019 Build)

To make the OS "slim," developers sometimes remove critical security infrastructure like Windows Defender, Windows Firewall, or the Windows Update engine itself. This leaves the system completely exposed to modern malware. 3. Broken Software and Driver Compatibility