It is not licensed to the general public, and as such Apple cannot update Boot Camp Assistant as needed. This special copy is licensed only to particular Windows OEMs and those in the Windows Insider Program. In regards to Windows 10, Apple silicon chips (such as M1) use the ARM architecture, and require a specialized copy of Windows 10. Newer Macs do have a security processor (either the T2 Security Chip or the Secure Enclave in Apple Silicon Macs), but it is not the same as a TPM, and remains incompatible with Windows 11. ![]() No Macs since 2007 have a TPM, and are therefore incompatible with the system requirements for Windows 11. If it can't find one, it will refuse to run. Windows 11 requires a Trusted Platform Module (TPM). ![]() Microsoft doesn't seem keen on bringing Windows 11 to any Macs whatsoever, regardless if they have Intel processors or use Apple silicon (such as the M1 chip).
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