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Windows 11 workstations
Windows 11 workstations










windows 11 workstations

Just under 2.5 percent of businesses have adopted Windows 11 while little over 3.2 percent of consumers have started using the operating system. Looking at a snapshot of 10 million Windows PCs used by businesses and regular people, Microsoft should be concerned. On physical servers, only 2.35 percent had TPM 2.0 enabled and virtual servers do not support TPM.

windows 11 workstations

When looking at RAM only 67.1 percent meet the requirement and only 55.7 percent have a compatible CPU. The news becomes even more grim when looking at virtual workstations where only 1.33 percent have TPM 2.0 enabled. And while the majority passed the RAM test (92.85 percent), about 65 percent of the workstation TPMs tested met the requirements, while over 15 percent failed and 20 percent was not TPM compatible or did not have it enabled,” Lansweeper reports. “Specifically, only 57.26 percent of CPUs for workstations tested met the system requirements for upgrading to Windows 11, while 42.74 percent did not. The firm found that 42.74 percent of workstations didn’t meet Microsoft’s CPU, RAM or TPM (Trusted Platform Module) requirements for the operating system. The analysis was conducted to determine how many workstations met Microsoft’s stringent hardware requirements for Windows 11. Last week IT asset management firm Lansweeper published analysis of 30 million Windows devices from 60 000 organisations. Upgrading to Windows 11 is more of a nightmare than anybody could have imagined and if Microsoft stays the course, many enterprises that run Windows may have to look for alternatives. Microsoft will no longer support Windows 10 from 14th October 2025, meaning Windows 11 uptake needs to improve dramatically.Only 2.35 percent of physical servers support TPM 2.0.Analysis from Lansweeper reveals 42.74 percent of business workstations meet the Windows 11 hardware requirements.












Windows 11 workstations