Windows 11 rolls out to PC users – but not all of them

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(NEW YORK) — Starting Tuesday, PC owners who run Windows 10 will be eligible to download Windows 11 for free. But the ability to use Microsoft’s latest operating system will largely depend on your computer’s age, and what type of processor it uses.

When Microsoft first showed off Windows 11 over the summer, it also announced some restrictions on what types of PCs can run the new operating system. The company says your PC will need a special processor known as a Trusted Platform Module, or “TPM,” chip to run the new operating system.

“It’s a little chip the size of your fingernail that lives on the motherboard, sometimes it’s on the CPU,” says Digital Trends Managing Editor Nick Mokey. “It’s there for security purposes, there’s a good reason Microsoft wants it.” 

In a June 25th blog post, Microsoft’s Director of Enterprise and OS Security David Weston wrote that the purpose of the company’s TPM requirement is to “help protect encryption keys, user credentials, and other sensitive data behind a hardware barrier so that malware and attackers can’t access or tamper with that data.”

Windows 11 launches against the backdrop of a rise in ransomware attacks. Some of those attacks, such as the SolarWinds hack, specifically targeted Microsoft code. 

Mokey says newer computers are more likely to include the TPM chip.

“The exception would be some people who built their own computers might not have the chip that you need. Also some gaming computers don’t come stock with them,” says Mokey. “But if you have something within – that you bought sort of out of the box within the last few years it’s quite likely you’ll be able to run Windows 11.”

To figure out if your computer can run Windows 11, Mokey recommends using Microsoft’s “PC Health Check” app.

“It takes a couple seconds to download, it’ll run on your PC, look at the specs and tell you with no ambiguity whether you can run Windows 11.”

Windows 11 brings a number of non-security related updates to PC users as well. Microsoft has moved the Start menu from the bottom left corner of the home screen to the bottom center (though the system also gives users the option to move it back to the traditional location). And Mokey says that’s only the start of the design updates to the new OS.

“It’s definitely a very different look than Windows 10,” says Mokey. “I think it’s a cleaner look. Microsoft has implemented these, sort of, rounded, glassy-looking menus. Some of the animations are more fluid.”

He adds Windows 11 makes some under-the-hood changes as well.

“Microsoft has also promised some better performance. So that means both better battery life, better security… and there’s actually some perks for gamers in there as well, performance-wise,” says Mokey.

One of the buzzier features Microsoft is touting with Windows 11 is the ability to run Android apps on the desktop. That would allow users to download and run apps like TikTok through the Microsoft Store – just not right away.

“I think that was one of the features people were most excited about and Microsoft kind of threw a wet blanket on that,” says Mokey. “At launch that will not be available.”

Microsoft has not said when the feature will launch on Windows 11.

Hear ABC News Radio’s Cheri Preston report on Windows 11:

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