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A Trusted Platform Module (TPM) is a secure cryptoprocessor that implements the ISO/IEC 11889 standard. Common uses are verifying that the boot process starts from a trusted combination of hardware and software and storing disk encryption keys. A TPM 2.0 implementation is part of the Windows 11 system requirements. [1]
For the first time since the release of Windows 11, version 24H2 introduces modified system requirements: A x86-64-v2 CPU supporting SSE4.2 and POPCNT CPU instructions is now required, otherwise the Windows kernel is unbootable. [9] [10] (Only affecting systems bypassing the TPM 2.0 requirement, along with all 24H2 IoT Enterprise editions.)
As part of the minimum system requirements, Windows 11 only runs on devices with a Trusted Platform Module 2.0 security coprocessor, [128] [129] albeit with some exceptions, see § System requirements for details.
As part of the minimum system requirements, Windows 11 only officially supports devices with a Trusted Platform Module 2.0 security coprocessor. [43] [44] According to Microsoft, TPM 2.0 is a "critical building block" for protection against firmware and hardware attacks.
Starting with Windows 10 1703, the requirements for device encryption have changed, requiring a TPM 1.2 or 2.0 module with PCR 7 support, UEFI Secure Boot, and that the device meets Modern Standby requirements or HSTI validation.
Windows CE 1.0: 1996-11-16 Unsupported Pegasus, Alder CE 1.0 Embedded First release of Microsoft's Windows CE line for minimalistic computers and embedded systems Windows CE 2.0: 1997-11-29 Unsupported Mercury, Apollo CE 2.0 2.1, 2.11 Embedded Windows CE 3.0: 2000-06-15 Unsupported (2007-10-09) Cedar, Galileo, Rapier, Merlin, Stinger CE 3.0