• Satelllliiiiiiiteeee@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I still don’t understand the TPM 2.0 requirement. As far as I know there’s nothing that Windows 11 does by default that requires TPM, just optional features like BitLocker or Windows Hello

    • bioemerl@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      It establishes the TPM as a common hardware requirement so that these companies can lock down the web and their hardware to kill your right to control your own shit.

    • Evilcoleslaw@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      TPM isn’t even really the big blocker for most of the CPUs that were excluded – many have TPM 2.0 functionality. The bigger culprit wrt compatibility is a virtualization security feature called MBEC (AMD has another name) If your CPU doesn’t have MBEC the functionality can be emulated in software but it comes at a potentially hefty performance hit.

      IIRC Intel 7th Gen has this feature but it doesn’t work properly on some/all chips so that’s why the Intel cutoff was 8th Gen. AMD has this feature on Zen 2 and above (Ryzen 3000) but Windows 11 supports Zen+ (Ryzen 2000 & 1600AF) using the emulation although it is indeed a large performance hit. I would see ~15-20% fps increase on my 1600AF in games when disabling the virtualization security settings. Now that I’ve moved to a Ryzen 5600 the difference between on and off is negligible.