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  • Turns out Windows 11 does not need TPM 2.0 after all


    Karlston

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    • 3 comments
    • 1k views
    • 2 minutes

    Turns out Windows 11 does not need TPM 2.0 after all

     

    Many Windows fans are today disappointed that they will not be able to upgrade their existing PC or laptop to Windows 11, due to not meeting the hardware criteria.

     

    Microsoft is telling users and the media that to upgrade to Windows 11 your PC needs at least:

     

    • 1 GHz dual-core processor
    • 4GB RAM
    • 64 GB storage
    • UEFI, Secure Boot capable, TPM 2.0
    • DirectX 12 compatible graphics with WDDM 2.0 driver
    • 720p display greater than 9” diagonally

     

    The TPM 2.0 issue, in particular, is a problem, as it was introduced relatively recently, with many PCs older than 2017 not supported.

     

    It turns out however what Microsoft and PC Health Check app is telling people is not the complete truth, according to their own documentation.

     

    windows-11-hardware-requirements.png

     

    It turns out that only TPM 1.2 is required,  but instead of telling users that an upgrade is not advised, Microsoft is simply saying PCs can not run the OS at all.

     

    windows-11-upgrade.png

     

    Microsoft’s motivation for the move is unclear at present, but many users are more than peeved that, unusual for Windows, they would need to buy new hardware to run a new OS.

     

    via FireCube

     

     

    Turns out Windows 11 does not need TPM 2.0 after all

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    That means, Microsoft is telling lies all the time to force users to buy the new machines with TPM 2.0.  And my suspicions are true after all, the PC Health Check is indeed bogus.

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    1 hour ago, zanderthunder said:

    That means, Microsoft is telling lies all the time to force users to buy the new machines with TPM 2.0.  And my suspicions are true after all, the PC Health Check is indeed bogus.

    Not a lie (maybe it is???) but really ANOTHER attempt to sell new machines!

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    2 hours ago, Nuclear Fallout said:

    Not a lie (maybe it is???) but really ANOTHER attempt to sell new machines!

    If they do that, they will lose a lot of customers, especially those who are in business and enterprise sectors.

    To change the CPU hardwares, it doesn't come cheap. And adding to the fact that we're still facing global semiconductor shortage, and expected to last even after final stable build of Windows 11 is released. So to force them to upgrade CPU hardware at this juncture, was a stupid decision ever during this pandemic season.

    Plus, Microsoft did say in July 2016, that all new hardwares must have TPM 2.0 enabled by default. So technically, any PC's released after that date should be supported for Windows 11.

    Quote

    Since July 28, 2016, all new device models, lines or series (or if you are updating the hardware configuration of a existing model, line or series with a major update, such as CPU, graphic cards) must implement and enable by default TPM 2.0 (details in section 3.7 of the Minimum hardware requirements page). The requirement to enable TPM 2.0 only applies to the manufacturing of new devices. For TPM recommendations for specific Windows features, see TPM and Windows Features.

    https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/security/information-protection/tpm/tpm-recommendations

     

    Besides, anyone can install the Windows 11 without worry about TPM checks. All they have to do is to this workaround:
    https://winaero.com/how-to-install-windows-11-without-tpm-2-0/

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