Despite some companies making strides with ARM, for the most part, the desktop and laptop space is still dominated by x86 machines. For all their advantages, they have a glaring flaw for anyone con…
Well provided your OEM hasn’t disabled it, on most of the computers I checked with IntelMEtool (the ones new enough to have IntelME) I found that AMT shows up as disabled on most of them, except for a few.
AMT is a great way to get a passworded VNC session into the terminal.
Well provided your OEM hasn’t disabled it, on most of the computers I checked with IntelMEtool (the ones new enough to have IntelME) I found that AMT shows up as disabled on most of them, except for a few.
AMT only works on a system that has a chipset and CPU that supports AMT, which used to be the vPro line of laptops.
Now pretty much everything is vPro, and it’s only the vPro enterprise that has AMT.