Windows 11 officially requires a Trusted Platform Module. Here's what it does and how you can work around that requirement if ...
Microsoft has poured cold water on any hopes of lower hardware requirements for Windows 11. With Windows 10 end of support ...
While announcing Windows 11, Microsoft made a very controversial move to change hardware requirements significantly. The ...
But the easiest and cheapest way out of the problem—an upgrade to Windows 11, which is still free for Windows 10 PCs that can ...
Users with older hardware can now upgrade to Windows 11 without replacing their entire system. The change will impact the security features of Windows 11, as TPM 2.0 plays a big role in System ...
TPM 2.0 (Trusted Platform Module 2.0) is a dedicated processor on modern computers that provides hardware-based security functions and serves as a trusted hardware component for storing sensitive ...
Microsoft’s minimum requirements for Windows 11 cover several hardware components, including having enough RAM and a powerful ...
With Windows 10 end of support approaching in October 2025, the software giant now says that its Trusted Platform Module (TPM) 2.0 requirement for Windows 11 is “non-negotiable.” In a blog ...
A Microsoft support page talks about Windows 11 upgrades on unsupported hardware.
Republished on December 14 with Microsoft’s response to dangerous user confusion after a raft of “muddled” articles were ...
In a lengthy blog post that underlines the necessity of the Trusted Platform Module (TPM) 2.0 for future Windows 11 and addresses any confusion before support for Windows 10 ends in October next year, ...