New
#430
Seem to be a lot of after-market TPM 2.0 devices out there.
https://www.amazon.com/tpm-module/s?k=tpm+module
Seem to be a lot of after-market TPM 2.0 devices out there.
https://www.amazon.com/tpm-module/s?k=tpm+module
I don't think there will be many "INSIDERS" able to get W11....That is unless they get a more up to date PC.
Crafty move by M$....Lots of W11 software sales, certainly not a freebie for the majority.
tpm 2.0 only support uefi with csm disabled so good luck with that.
I am disappointed even my haswell asrock z97 will left outside.
Many older mother boards have a connector for a discrete TPM, and they can be swapped out, many Intel CPUs already have an integrated TPM 2.0 too.
TPM 2.0 Library | Trusted Computing Group
The 'PC Health' thingy said that my computer can't run Win11 - it's only 2 years old FFS! I am not buying a new computer for Win11.
They never said that Win10 was the last version of Windows there would ever be. They said Win10 was the last version of Windows you'll ever buy. They were right, at least in my case! Looks like Win10 is the end of the line for me.
Who said "there's no such thing as a Free Lunch"
Remember way back when a Software company called "the Last One" who wrote some sort of Interpreter that worked on MS DOS and sort of programmed automatically by asking questions etc so you didn't need any experience in coding whatsoever - the program would generate the code said "This is the last software you'll ever have to buy". Company didn't last very long but was interesting at the time.
Cheers
jimbo
Here's a simple way to quick check your system for TPM and the version:
Press Windows+R to open a run dialog window.
Type tpm.msc into it and press Enter to launch the tool.
On some PCs, it’s possible to disable the TPM chip in the computer’s UEFI firmware or BIOS.
If the TPM chip is disabled at this level, it’s deactivated and won’t appear in Windows - even though your PC actually has the hardware.
HTH