Not sure, i went through all the bios screens, the only mention i found of TPM was to activate the TPM chip and it says none installed.
Oops, I lied. LoL I went through the bios screens again on the Ryzen 7 2700x motherboard and found the setting so it is built into the CPU. Device manager shows it now. All my other machines will have to be upgraded as Enthousiast has showed. Thanks for your assistance guys!
From WU metadata Code: Title: .NET Windows Version Next – RS_PRERELEASE (PRE-RTM) CLIENT Description: Win10 version Next RS_PRERELEASE build flights AND NI_RELEASE build flights Applicability: b.WindowsVersion Comparison="GreaterThanOrEqualTo" BuildNumber="22400" does that mean one for 10 and one for 11? or both are the same?
The build number in Applicability mentions build 22400, that would be one of the future builds coming to Dev.
I'm one of those who hang on to their computers for 10 plus years - I'm currently testing Windows 11 on a laptop I bought in 2010. However, my 3 year old laptop (i7 - 7th gen) is dying - they don't build them like they used to. Expecting anything to last more than 5 years is a pipe dream. But back to the real world. The cutoff for Windows 11 CPU is Intel Core 8th Gen, which came out about 3 years ago. Windows 10 has 4+ years to go, by which time these CPUs will be 7+ years old.
"Around September 3, 2012, Canouna sent an email to a person in Redmond, allegedly including some sample code from the Microsoft Activation Server Software Development Kit and asking if the recipient could help him “better understand its contents.” The outside source, who asked to remain anonymous, contacted Microsoft’s Steven Sinofsky instead." The smart leaker.