Officially? No. The N3060 is not on Microsoft’s supported CPU list (requires TPM 2.0 and MBEC). Unofficially? Many users have bypassed the checks using Rufus or Flyby11.
Unlike mainstream Core i-series drivers that get shiny updates every quarter, the N3060 sits in a grey area. It’s not legacy enough to be fully abandoned, but it’s too old to receive the modern Arc Control Panel. Here is everything you need to know about squeezing every last drop of performance out of this GPU. intel celeron n3060 graphics driver
The most common issue with the N3060 is TDR (Timeout Detection and Recovery). Because the GPU shares system RAM (DDR3L 1600MHz), if your laptop has only 2GB or 4GB of single-channel RAM, the driver will crash frequently. Officially
If you install the Intel generic driver from their website, you will get an error: "The driver being installed is not validated for this computer." This is because OEMs (Acer, Asus, HP, Lenovo) locked the PCI Subsystem ID. Unofficially
If you are reading this, you likely own a device powered by the Intel Celeron N3060. Launched in Q1 2016 as part of the "Braswell" architecture, this dual-core, 2.6 GHz burst chip has powered countless budget laptops, Chromebooks, Windows 2-in-1s, and embedded systems. While the CPU is often the bottleneck, the integrated graphics——is where things get both frustrating and fascinating.