On AMD systems its a bit different . It should be set in Bios. I had to switch dfTPM from discrete to Hardware on my Asus MB. Intel system are configured with TPM 2.0 + out of the box no?
Hell I installed it on a 2011 Acer Aspire D255 10.1" NETBOOK using the iso replace trick and it basically works fine...
I think TPM defaults to hardware on my old ASUS Z360 board (not included with the board) but it can be changed to firmware mode. Later systems might default to firmware mode (or Auto which selects firmware in the absence of hardware) but it's doubtful. My AMD based notebook defaults to TPM enabled (probably firmware TPM)
its a Windows tool to edit and deploy Windows images (aka, .wim) in short. But it needs at least some medium knowledge for the commands. If u just want to install win11 on your pc just use the 2nd method, is the easiest
You need 2 iso files. One , a Windows 10 .iso and a second one with Windows 11 You extract both .iso. And replace the "install.wim" file on Windows 10 extraction with Windows 11's . Both files are located inside respective "Sources" folder of each extraction. So then you run setup from Windows 10 extraction that now is actually Windows 11. You can do this as that, live upgrade, instead of reconstructing .iso and booting it from USB. That's what worked on my experience
Apparently it is S for "S mode" . That is Windows limited to Microsoft Store Apps only, Edge and ( probably) DCH drivers
To everyone who has problems installing win 11. I made to clean install by replacing install wim from win 11 to win 10 installation iso. So, take win 11 install wim and put it/replace it in win 10 iso. That is all. No need for any bios changing. Thanks to anyone who helped.
Geez, I hate that! How am I supposed to eat a sandwich or fried chicken (etc.) and keep my screen clean. Just kidding... I'm sure they will also provide access via mouse and keyboard.