Sr. Systems Engineer, Government Employee, Cryptic Mason, Musician, Gamer, Weightlifter. /G\. Opinions my own. Part owner of FUSIONTech LLC. PubSecMSP.
@mniehaus@intel Resurrecting your post here but I can confirm enabling Intel PTT in my ASUS UEFI settings also results in a "TPM 2.0" being detected by Windows. Windows 11 still says that I am compliant and supported as well. Chalk that up to me being a dummy and wasting $60!
@mniehaus@intel Resurrecting your post here but I can confirm enabling Intel PTT in my ASUS UEFI settings also results in a "TPM 2.0" being detected by Windows. Windows 11 still says that I am compliant and supported as well. Chalk that up to me being a dummy and wasting $60!
@jwhirl06 Here's what I don't understand about that: the @Intel Z590 chipset supports a firmware TPM 2.0, so you shouldn't need a physical TPM chip. You should just need to enable Intel's Platform Trust Technology (PTT) in the firmware settings. https://t.co/4iH51fXTYH
@HPE C'mon HPE, we're experiencing a systems outage and I just found out last night that our account rep left the company some time ago by an undeliverable message from O365? Furthermore, we paid the big bucks for support on this hardware that I've lost storage controllers twice
Ah yes, another 24 hour day on station recovering our environment from DR. Lost a P408e storage controller which caused one of our CSVs to become unmountable. Underlying S2D storage space was fine as we removed the problem volume from the cluster shared volumes and directly
attached it to one of the S2D hypervisors. After that we made note of what VMs were in that CSV and onlined their replicas in our @Veeam environment and started the process of failing them back. We weren't too worried about data loss from restoring the replicas as