Acpi Ven-msft Amp-dev-0101 ~upd~ <5000+ ESSENTIAL>

You might notice:

Elena picked up her phone. Then she put it down. The moment she reported this, the device in her pocket—also with VEN-MSFT AMP-DEV-0101 in its DSDT—would log an access attempt. The countdown might accelerate. acpi ven-msft amp-dev-0101

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. You might notice: Elena picked up her phone

Because Windows treats TPM 2.0 as an essential platform feature, there are no third-party standalone downloadable files for it. Instead, you must force the Windows Plug-and-Play (PnP) subsystem to rebuild the stack: The countdown might accelerate