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Where does the leaked Windows 11 ISO fit into this table?
Source: Preparing for Insider Preview Builds of Windows 11 | Windows Insider Blog
Where does the leaked Windows 11 ISO fit into this table?
Source: Preparing for Insider Preview Builds of Windows 11 | Windows Insider Blog
here , and the next few posts show how to do it
Watch what is next for Windows event on June 24, 2021
I'll express what may be a contrarian view. To be clear, I'm not purchasing any new laptops or doing significant upgrades to my desktop. So my hardware today is my hardware when I have the opportunity to upgrade to Win 11. And I expect that this TPM brouhaha and other issues to be sorted out by then.
In the meantime, to quote Macbeth, Act V, scene 5,
It is a tale ... full of sound and fury, Signifying nothing.
Same for me. I have a i5-3570K CPU on a Gigabyte GA-Z77X-UD5H motherboard. The system is still snappy and runs demanding games like Flight Simulator 2020 OK using a RTX 2060 Super GPU. It's unkind to the planet to be expected to scrap such perfectly fine PCs to satisfy the crazy demands of Microsoft. My motherboard has a 20 pin TPM 1.2 connector but of course the Gigabyte TPM module needed is unavailable. You can't use another manufacturer's TPM since there is no common TPM module interface standard and the pin outs differ.
Looks like TPM 1.2 is going to be incompatible with Windows 11 anyway after all so then it wouldn't even matter the fact the module is unavailable, right?
Why Windows 11 is forcing everyone to use TPM chips - The Verge