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You don't 'need' to upgrade to Windows 11 until October of 2025.
That is when Micro$oft is going to pull the plug on Windows 10 support.
All CPUs designated as supported by Windows 11 have one of these technologies to provide TPM 2.0 support.
If you don't have support at all, instead of downloading a "custom" version of Windows 11 from a sketchy site, just download the official version from the Media Creation Tool then use the program Rufus to create an installation USB that bypasses the requirements.
Without TPM 2.0, Windows 11 may not be able to properly secure the boot process or data encryption, which could impact the performance and security of the operating system. Additionally, some features and functions of Windows 11 may not work as intended, or may not be available at all, without TPM 2.0.
:steamlaughter:
But whatever Microsoft doing - locking an OS behind an arbitrary processor generation limit (intel 8th gen minimum - AMD 3rd gen minimum), making their OS harder to navigate and add more unnecessary preloaded crap like Clipchamp and Candy Crush Saga - is anti customer,and bad. I also hate the fact that there are TWO app types for windows since 2012 - Win32 Apps and UWP Apps (no one really used them in 8,so they made bunch of essential apps utilise their god awful UWP framework with 10).
I also don't like Windows 10 for this very same reason. But hey,it's plug and play and that's all I need since my computer is being used by others too,so that sadly leaves Linux out as an option.
Most distros are the same down to the core nowadays,so it's just mostly a preference thing. I like how I can set arch Linux up though so that's my go to distro.
That's all that matters.
That makes Windows 11 better... How exactly?
On Windows - TPM is supported since Windows 7 - it's not something new.
https://www.techtarget.com/whatis/definition/trusted-platform-module-TPM
When TPM 2.0 was invented - https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trusted_Platform_Module
In 2014
And earlier versions were as early as 2009, although TPM baked into CPUs only started to become common in 2015-2016.
Vulernable Windows 7 systems can get easily hacked as Windows 7 no longer receives security updates since 2020.
Just one of the many articles,showing why staying on an up to date system is important if you're connected to the internet.
https://www.cybersecuritydive.com/news/windows-7-industrial-hack-Oldsmar/595362/
Mint? I suppose it's very minty.