Microsoft has evolved its development platform to .NET 6, 7, and 8 (now .NET 9), but millions of applications—from AutoCAD 2007 to custom hospital management systems—still rely on . The problem? Windows 10 does not install this older framework by default. When you try to install it via the standard "Turn Windows features on or off" dialog, Windows attempts to download the necessary files from Microsoft Update Servers. This frequently fails due to corporate firewalls, slow internet, or server timeouts.
Dism /online /Add-Package /PackagePath:"C:\path\to\cabfile.cab" If you already have a verified offline installer (a .cab or a folder with microsoft-windows-netfx3-ondemand-package.cab ), follow these steps for Windows 10 64-bit: Step 1: Verify System Architecture Right-click the Start button > System. Ensure "System type" says 64-bit operating system, x64-based processor . Step 2: Extract the Offline Files Place the installer folder on your desktop or C:\temp . Ensure the path has no spaces. Step 3: Run DISM (Deployment Imaging Service and Management Tool) Open PowerShell or CMD as Administrator. Net Framework 3.5 Offline Installer Windows 10 64 Bit
Introduction: Why You Still Need .NET Framework 3.5 in the Era of Windows 11 and 10 If you are a Windows 10 64-bit user, you have likely encountered a frustrating pop-up message while trying to install an older game, a legacy business application, or a specialized engineering tool. The message reads: "Your app needs .NET Framework 3.5 (includes 2.0 and 3.0)." Microsoft has evolved its development platform to