F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Secure Boot on Windows 11 ensures the system boots only trusted software.

Secure Boot on Windows 11 ensures the system boots only trusted software.

Secure Boot on Windows 11 ensures the system boots only trusted software.

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Rhuji
Senior Member
437
05-11-2021, 12:50 AM
#1
I've been exploring Windows 11 more often and noticed my secure boot isn't active. I'm wondering how to enable it. My system lists a legacy BIOS, but I don't know where to adjust the EUFI settings. I've tried enabling secure boot in BIOS, but it refused to proceed. After restarting, the BIOS appeared on another screen yet I couldn't activate it. The issue keeps recurring even after disabling secure boot in BIOS. My hardware includes an MSI GTX 1050 TI Gaming X Intel i5-8400 and a Gigabyte Z370 HD3 motherboard. Could you assist? Thank you.
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Rhuji
05-11-2021, 12:50 AM #1

I've been exploring Windows 11 more often and noticed my secure boot isn't active. I'm wondering how to enable it. My system lists a legacy BIOS, but I don't know where to adjust the EUFI settings. I've tried enabling secure boot in BIOS, but it refused to proceed. After restarting, the BIOS appeared on another screen yet I couldn't activate it. The issue keeps recurring even after disabling secure boot in BIOS. My hardware includes an MSI GTX 1050 TI Gaming X Intel i5-8400 and a Gigabyte Z370 HD3 motherboard. Could you assist? Thank you.

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Echo_Runner
Member
215
05-14-2021, 11:13 PM
#2
Brought to Windows *** Your system doesn't have it built in, but you can add it as extra hardware. Purchase the component, connect it and it should turn on itself.
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Echo_Runner
05-14-2021, 11:13 PM #2

Brought to Windows *** Your system doesn't have it built in, but you can add it as extra hardware. Purchase the component, connect it and it should turn on itself.

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cjdeibert
Member
139
05-22-2021, 09:23 AM
#3
Which component you're referring to is a TPM chip, though you already have an integrated version.
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cjdeibert
05-22-2021, 09:23 AM #3

Which component you're referring to is a TPM chip, though you already have an integrated version.