Secure Boot Tpm
The latest Secure Boot Tpm coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
OneXPlayer 3 launches with Intel Arc G3 Extreme GPU and 8.8-inch 144Hz OLED screen.
The OneXPlayer 3 sets a new benchmark for Windows gaming handhelds with its vibrant 8.8-inch 144Hz OLED screen, detachable controllers, and the debut of Intel’s Arc G3 Extreme GPU. A massive 85Wh battery promises extended play sessions, while Windows 11 compatibility ensures access to every game launcher. But its premium price and early-adopter quirks may limit its appeal beyond hardcore enthusiasts.
Windows 11 Runs on a 2006 Core 2 Quad with AGP Graphics—But 24H2's POPCNT Demand May End the Hack
A daring tech enthusiast has successfully installed Windows 11 on a 2006-era Core 2 Quad system with DDR1 RAM and AGP graphics, achieving surprising stability on version 23H2. However, the new 24H2 update requires the POPCNT CPU instruction, which this vintage chip lacks—likely ending the hack's viability and forcing the community to face a November 2025 security deadline.
Valve Reveals $1,049 Steam Machine PC Launching June 30, 2026 — Here's What to Expect
Valve is launching a new $1,049 Steam Machine on June 30, 2026—a compact AMD living-room PC running SteamOS. Building on the Steam Deck's success, this second attempt at a Linux-based console alternative promises access to the full Steam library via Proton, with no Windows license required, targeting gamers who want a simpler couch experience.
AMD Resurrects Zen+ and Zen 2 for 2026 Budget Laptops, Keeping DDR4 Alive
AMD is reportedly bringing back Zen+ and Zen 2 processors for budget OEM laptops and desktops in 2026. The move aims to provide affordable Windows 11 systems with DDR4 support, prolonging the life of the memory standard. This strategy highlights the continuing demand for low-cost PCs and the challenges of transitioning to newer technologies.
Secure Boot's 2026 Deadline: Why Your Windows PC Needs a Certificate Update Before It's Too Late
Microsoft's original Secure Boot certificates expire in June 2026, threatening to render millions of Windows PCs unbootable unless they are updated to trust the newer 2023 certificates. Both IT administrators and end users must act now—auditing hardware, applying firmware updates, and preparing BitLocker recovery keys—to avoid a scramble as the deadline approaches.
AI Data Centers Face Cooling Failures, Insurance Hikes, and Grid Strain in Record Heat. Learn How Microsoft Adapts to Protect Windows and AI.
AI-generated article about Windows technology.
NTLite 2026.06.11200 Delivers Secure Boot Migration and Live Readiness Scanning
NTLite 2026.06.11200 introduces automated Secure Boot certificate migration, live host readiness scanning, and expanded command-line control for enterprise imaging pipelines. Image-handling upgrades include faster compression and new frozen WIM layers, while unattended setup refinements add Entra ID auto-enrollment and improved answer-file validation.
Windows Enterprise AI Hits Capacity Wall: How 2026 GPU Shortages Are Reshaping IT Strategy
AI-generated article about Windows technology.
Microsoft’s Sachin Gandhi: Enterprise AI Agents Need Immutable Audit Trails and Ironclad Governance
At Cloud Wars 2026, Microsoft’s Sachin Gandhi detailed a governance framework for enterprise AI agents that hinges on identity security and immutable audit trails. Copilot Studio serves as the control plane where IT admins can enforce policies and monitor agent actions across a multi-agent ecosystem. The approach aims to balance rapid agent deployment with enterprise compliance needs.
ESO Patch 2.86 Lands on Console, PC: Signet Nerf Shakes Meta, Werewolf and Quest Fixes Arrive
ZeniMax released ESO update 2.86 on June 29, 2026, nerfing the overpowered Shattered Path Signet mythic, fixing long-standing Werewolf bugs, and repairing quest progression and crashes. Windows players received the same changes silently weeks earlier, sparking debates over communication. The patch realigns the damage meta and forces build adjustments for both PvE and PvP.
Microsoft Hit With Securities Lawsuit as Investors Question Copilot AI Adoption Claims
Microsoft is facing a securities class action lawsuit filed by Bronstein, Gewirtz & Grossman, alleging investors were misled about Copilot AI adoption and Azure AI costs. The suit covers shares bought between May 2025 and January 2026. This article examines the allegations, the context of Microsoft's AI strategy, and the implications for investors and enterprise IT.
Microsoft Clarifies: You Can Safely Unplug USB Drives Without Ejecting – But Only If This Setting Is Active
Microsoft changed the default external drive policy in Windows 10 version 1809 to Quick Removal, which disables write caching and allows drives to be unplugged without using Safely Remove Hardware. While this makes sudden removal safe for most users, drives set to Better Performance still require ejection to prevent data loss. Users should check their drive's policy to avoid corruption.
Humanoid Robots at Scale: AGIBOT's 15,000th G2 Unit Signals Embodied AI's Factory Era
AGIBOT has reached a landmark 15,000 units of its G2 humanoid robot, transitioning embodied AI from demonstrations to real factory deployment. The milestone signals a shift to industrial scale, with implications for automation economics, fleet management, and the integration of robotics into Windows-centric enterprise environments.