Microsoft released Windows 11 in October 2021 and released Windows 11 22H2 on September 20, but many organisations haven’t got around to upgrading yet, and hardware that doesn’t make the grade is going to be one of the factors holding them back. The main obstacles to upgrading devices to Windows 11 are the CPU and the Trusted Platform Module (TPM), which was either not present or not enabled in the research. Windows 11 requires TPM 2.0 and approved CPUs. Lansweeper found that 42.76% of CPUs failed to meet the minimum, while 14.66% didn’t meet Microsoft’s TPM 2.0 requirement. “Lansweeper data based on an estimated 30 million Windows devices from 60,000 organizations reveals that on average, only 57.26% of the workstations are eligible to receive the automatic upgrade, while the rest would be ineligible,” Lansweeper’s Esben Dochy notes in a blogpost. Also: Windows 11 22H2: How to get Microsoft’s latest OS update and what’s coming next The share of enterprise workstations that can update to Windows 11 has improved over the past year, though: last October, Lansweeper found 55% of workstations didn’t meet the Windows 11 minimum system requirements. Dochy notes that the percentage of devices that meet the CPU and TPU requirements have increased by 12%, while those meeting RAM requirements rose by 1.8% (the vast majority of PCs already meet the 4GB RAM minimum). Last October, Microsoft officials were extremely confident that no customer will be left behind on unsupported Windows 10. “If this growth continues, theoretically all devices should be Windows 11 compatible by 2026. Although this does fall short of the Windows 10 end-of-life on October 14, 2025,” notes Dochy. PC shipments are slowing dramatically. IDC reported this week that cooling demand plus supply chain problems caused PC shipments to decline 15% year on year in the third quarter (Q3) of 2022, totaling 74.2 million units. Shipments by Lenovo, HP, Dell and Asus were all down for the quarter between 15% and 28%. Apple bucked the industry trend with a 40% rise in shipments. Even though more hardware meets Windows 11 requirements, Lansweeper’s research found Windows 11 adoption remains limited. It claimed only 2.61% of users across business and consumer have upgraded to Windows 11, while 81.87% remain on Windows 10. It says its data is based on research from over 27 million Windows devices. Windows 11 adoption among consumers was slightly higher at just over 3%, while business adoption was just under 2.5%. Lansweeper’s estimate for Windows 11 adoption is much lower than estimates from Steam, the Valve-owned gaming platform. Steam users likely do invest more in hardware than general consumers. Nonetheless, it reported Windows 11 adoption was at 25% in September 2022, up from 20% in May, while 71% were on Windows 10, and 2.4% were on Windows 7. GlobalStats puts Windows 11 adoption at 13.6%, behind Windows 10 adoption of 72%. But the US government’s website analytics portal hasn’t been updated to track Windows 11. Microsoft chief Satya Nadella has said enterprises are adopting Windows 11 “at a faster pace than previous releases.”