TPM is disabled or misconfigured in the BIOS.
In Device Manager, any entry starting with "ACPI" represents a virtual device that the firmware (BIOS/UEFI) has reported to Windows. Many of these are standard (e.g., the "ACPI Lid" or "ACPI Battery"). However, when you see VEN-MSFT&DEV-0101 , you are looking at a device that Microsoft itself has defined, but one that often lacks a publicly distributed driver. acpi ven-msft amp-dev-0101
This public link is valid for 7 days and shares a thread, including any personal information you added. This link or copies made by others cannot be deleted. If you share with third parties, their policies apply. Can’t copy the link right now. Try again later. TPM is disabled or misconfigured in the BIOS
Are you using , Azure , or another virtualization platform? However, when you see VEN-MSFT&DEV-0101 , you are
Save your settings (usually via ) and reboot into Windows. Step 2: Flush and Reinstall the Native Windows TPM Stack
This is the most revealing part. Historically, “AMP” in this context refers to , but in modern Windows 10 and 11 builds, it specifically relates to the Windows Audio and Power Management Proxy Device . The ID DEV-0101 is a unique identifier for a Microsoft-provided interface that helps manage audio streams during low-power states (like Modern Standby / S0 Low Power Idle).
False. This is a logical/virtual device. Hardware failure would manifest very differently (e.g., no boot, random freezes).