Windows 11

hmm,,,,,

well im out of ideas then, use clean 11 iso as i explained and pray.
I just go for clean and no drivers installed till it is up and running. Have had no issues and don't think I have done it any other way.

However I could see why this might be important to some people who like to do there installs.
 
mine, was a custom image, but without any drivers pre loaded into the image. Just the default of windows11 untouched.
I try to rebuild win11 with this cert and see what happen.
Thankyou Clanger Taosd for now o_O
 
repacking the image right now.
also, in ntlite there is under extra services something related to AMD processor and i enable it. it was manual.
the "fun"thing i read about this chipset driver issue is from a guy who running it on win11 dev build without any problems. but still in home edition :confused:
 
This should be its own thread because this is troubleshooting, not news/chat stuff, and this isn't specific to W11. You're also using a custom Windows image and the error could be stemming from the XML. I realize other people on the internet have the problem, but that doesn't mean they aren't using custom Windows and/or used a bunch of scripts they downloaded to mod things too. I have potential solutions to provide, but I won't add all that back and forth in this unrelated thread since it's already at 2 pages and no solution found. Putting questions like these into their own threads also makes it easier for other people searching for solutions to find one.
 
but we dont know if its a removals problem or not, if it is then it will benefit other users.
if it is down to ms and/or amd then it will help when people report to them.
 
If this doesn't appear to have an easy solution, let's spin out the AMD chipset installer question to a different thread. Since it's not clear if the problem is specific to W11, earlier versions of W10 or 11, or limited to some motherboards.
 
What I meant by "2 pages and no solution" is that this is clearly not a simple little thing that can be discussed in the nature of a chat thread and resolved quickly. Go back just a few pages and you can see this whole scenario in action again. Start here (link) and end here (link), where Garlin says, "Quick questions can be asked if they're W11 specific (features not in W10), and unrelated to custom removals."

It does not make logical sense to clump tons of different problems into 1 single thread. Even Nuhi has said he doesn't like that, when he commented on other larger threads in the past because people kept posting their individual problems on popular threads.
 
users dont always feel that something justifies its own thread when they expect a few posts only.
ive had people shoehorn/to right a bit stuff in my threads and i let them fly because i understand things dont warrant a new thread.
 
Maybe what's needed is new General Forum threads each for AMD Chipset/Drivers, Intel Chipset/Drivers, and NVIDIA Drivers so the same types of questions can be easily found. Visitors who are more interested in those subjects can spend their time there.
 
im sorry for the quick question made, maybe not related to this topic but in this case, after a clean installation of latest Windows 11 pro from Microsoft, and installed in uefi, tpm2.0 active and secure boot active, the chipset installed easly.

the thing who made me think about "maybe now the cpu is properly recognized" is when i activated tpm from the bios.

now the simple question. if i made my custom image without the bypass of tpm, and let Windows see it, and bypass just the secure boot?
this potential options allow me to made the usual unattended page and proceed with the installation?

sorry if my chipset question sound a little strange right here but now is clear and completly in the theme of the topic. i think.
 
BypassTPM only disables Setup's hardware check -- it does nothing to impact anything else in Windows.

If you have TPM support, Windows should detect it and use it. If not, Windows will still work without it. Whether the AMD installer should care, is a different question. In theory, it's only supposed to check for the right CPU model and stepping (revision).

To confirm your theory, install a clean image without the AMD chipset package. Afterwards, install the same package on the live system with TPM disabled. Does that make any difference?
 
unfortunatly i dont have too much time. anyway i make a first image with my custom setting in ntlite. checked every tpm thing related, installed Windows 11 but the tpm management console didnt works in Windows. and also chipset AMD didnt works.
so i made another image, same settings in ntlite, and this time checked recommended in compatibility. now my custom image has a working tpm management console, and magically AMD driver chipset installed easly!!

now, i can sit and start installing everything or maybe polish the image again, because "recommended" i think actvate many things right? i need first of all "time", then filter for recommended in ntlite and check one by one what to take and what not, without breaking tpm console. thats it.
 
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TPM is both a removable driver and component. When in doubt, use the search (Filter) bar.
Code:
                <c>driver_tpm.inf</c>
                <c>driver_tpmvsc.inf</c>
                <c>tpm 'Trusted Platform Module (TPM)'</c>
                <c>tpmmmc 'Trusted Platform Module (TPM) (management console)'</c>
                <c>tpmmmc32 'Trusted Platform Module (TPM) (management console) - 32 bit'</c>
                <c>tpmvsc 'Virtual Smart Card'</c>
 
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