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Microsoft Businesses Windows

Microsoft Says Summer's Windows 10 Upgrade Fit For Business (computerworld.com) 119

Microsoft has moved Windows 10 August update to the Current Branch for Business release track, putting the "Anniversary Update" in the queue for automatic downloads and installation on enterprise PCs. From a report on ComputerWorld: The move will also set in motion a two-month countdown clock on support for the original mid-2015 version of Windows 10. "Windows 10 1607, also known as the Windows 10 Anniversary Update, has been declared as Current Branch for Business (CBB) and is ready for deployment," Michael Niehaus, a director of product marketing, said in a post to a company blog that used similar wording to the first upgrade to the CBB. In April, Microsoft moved the November 2015 upgrade to the corporate delivery track. Microsoft issued the Anniversary Update Aug. 2, even though its numerical designation of 1607 referred to July (07) of this year (16). The upgrade will be released in January through Windows Update, Windows Update for Business and Windows Server Update Services (WSUS), Niehaus said.
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Microsoft Says Summer's Windows 10 Upgrade Fit For Business

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  • This will save me time from rolling out a custom image to our 90,000 desktops. Thanks Microsoft! I posted again!
    • Well, at least we now know, or have always known, what Microsoft thinks of your business.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 01, 2016 @02:55PM (#53403149)

    Does it involve removing the "telemetry" AKA spyware?

    • by blackomegax ( 807080 ) on Thursday December 01, 2016 @03:00PM (#53403189) Journal
      Working for a very large Fortune 500: Our requirements before deploying 10 are essentially that it must deployable with NO telemetry to MS, NO spying, and NO ads.
      • by sinij ( 911942 )
        Do you think MS would accommodate? Sure, sales would promise you anything to close the deal, but would it actually get delivered or are you going to be stuck having to block all that crap at the firewall?
      • If you are using Enterprise versions then you can turn off telemetry.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Too bad turning off telemetry doesn't actually stop it from spying on you. The setting is just there to trick the user, not to actually do anything.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          I do not want to turn them off. I want them turned off by default. Even better: not being there at all.

      • MS Translation: "We've beefed up our storage capacity, we're now ready to know all about your business."

        Maybe that's their new internal slogan "We make it our business to know all about your business".
      • And why exactly should MS give two shits about your "requirements"? What exactly are you going to do if MS tells you to take your requirements and stick them up your ass, and that you're going to use Windows 10 or else?
        ("or else" being "you're on your own--good luck trying to keep Windows 7 secure after we've cut off support for it".)

        I sincerely hope that when Win7 finally gets EOLed, that MS tells companies like this that they're going to use Win10 with telemetry, spying, and ads whether they like it or n

        • You're kidding, right?

          If this is a large Fortune 500 business we're talking about, it's probably a household name with many thousands of staff. If Microsoft try to screw them, a few executives from that business are going to have some pleasant conversations over golf with people who also happen to work at a senior level for alternative suppliers like Apple and Red Hat.

          First, they're going to cut a nice deal for enterprise-scale everything, because any business that size is worth serious money. Score a win f

          • No, I'm not kidding. How exactly do you propose these F500 businesses get all their Windows-only applications (internal and external) running on MacOSX or Linux? If companies were actually serious about putting this kind of effort into a different OS, many more would have switched by now. They're not. These customers are utterly locked in; the only real competition Microsoft has is with their own older software versions.

            • It's simple economics. There's a significant cost to any technology migration in an organisation of that scale, and there's also typically a significant cost to relying on systems for longer than they're well suited for the job. As you imply yourself, this is true whether you're talking about updating to a newer product from the same supplier or you're talking about switching to a different supplier. There is rarely such a thing as being truly locked in for large enterprises, there is only when the cost of

              • Perhaps, but I think that it would take a pretty incredible amount of "silly things" to tip the balance enough to make organizations actually leave Windows. Companies aren't 100% rational; they're still run by humans, who have their own biases and prejudices, and organizational inertia is extremely strong.

                • I don't disagree with you on the being run by humans and having inertia aspects. I just think you're underestimating how damaging trying to force known data leaks and uncontrolled software into a large organisation would be.

                  The data leak aspect is a concern for the lawyers, as well as the obvious underlying security implications. I'm only involved with smaller businesses, which previously used Pro versions of Windows, but even we don't seem to be able to move to Windows 10 without risking violating various

                  • I'm not underestimating how damaging those things are, I'm maybe overestimating how willing these organizations are to put up with these shenanigans so they don't have to switch away from Windows. As you say, a lot of stuff is in "the cloud" or has a web-based interface these days, but a lot still doesn't, plus MS Office seems to be irreplaceable to just about every business and it only runs on Windows. Plus in so many companies, their IT departments seem to have been all-MS (even for applications that do

                    • If we were talking about updates to the Enterprise version of 7 or 8.1, which organisations might already have deployed widely, presumably it would be tougher for those organisations to justify the switch. Maybe only those who were concerned about serious legal/regulatory issues would do so. But then in that situation, the sysadmins could just block the other updates they didn't want, so concerns about updates introducing ads or removing features or whatever don't really apply.

                      The thing with Windows 10 is t

                    • Ok, that makes sense, but I'm not proposing that MS push these shenanigans any time too soon. What if they wait until everyone's finally moved to Win10 Enterprise, perhaps in 3-5 years, and *then* they start tightening the screws on their corporate customers, mis-feature by mis-feature? Remember the old tale about the frog in boiling water.

            • If companies were actually serious about putting this kind of effort into a different OS, many more would have switched by now.

              Why would they? If their applications run just fine on Windows or macOS then why would have switched? What extraoardinary advantage does a different OS give them that would be worth the enormous effort and huge expenses involved in recruiting and managing talent to build capable and feature-comparable versions of industry leading content-creation applications? Like say you run architectural firm and your draftsmen, engineers, architects, whatever come in, load up Revit on their Windows machines and do their

              • They wouldn't need to build their own apps necessarily, just put a lot of pressure on their ISV vendors to make versions of those apps which run on the OS of their choice. ISVs made Windows versions of their apps ages ago when their customers pressured them to because they wanted to move to Windows from whatever they were using before (usually UNIX); this is no different. So the question really is: what advantage does a different OS give them that would be worth the expensive and effort of getting ISVs to

                • ISVs made Windows versions of their apps ages ago when their customers pressured them to because they wanted to move to Windows from whatever they were using before (usually UNIX); this is no different.

                  Of course they did because at that time they expended huge amounts of effort supporting the various different platforms but when the trend of everybody having their own flavour of UNIX on their own hardware died out in favour of a more standardized x86 PC platform that ended up running Windows for better or worse the ISVs saw the value in consolidating on the one dominant platform. Sure they could have kept spending resources supporting SunOS, Xenix, IRIX, HP-UX, Minix, et al but what would be the value in

          • by dbIII ( 701233 )

            If you think I'm kidding about all of this

            No I just think you are being unrealistic about the "care factor" of those execs you think will send in the lawyers with guns blazing.

            If this happens once

            There was that city in Germany and a few other things over the years. It has happened more than once already.

            • No I just think you are being unrealistic about the "care factor" of those execs you think will send in the lawyers with guns blazing.

              If Microsoft introduced mandatory telemetry, spyware, upgrades, ads etc. in Windows 10 Enterprise, in the same way that they have in Home and Pro, I imagine a fair number of those lawyers would be the ones demanding that their business didn't move to Windows 10 Enterprise, right next to the senior IT staff.

              It has happened more than once already.

              In rather different circumstances, and relatively rarely even then. Now compare how often it's happened with how often there has been a credible threat of it happening until someone from a big software co

              • by dbIII ( 701233 )
                Indeed, you do imagine that while I imagine that they are not going to care any more than they already have
                That spyware is already active on many execs laptops which came with the "pro" versions instead of a wishful thinking "Enterprise" label.
                • What large corporate IT department has their executives running any version of Windows Pro on their laptops, rather than Enterprise connected to their centralised update servers etc?

                  What corporate IT department has allowed any machines under their control, even running Windows 7/8/8.1 Pro if it's a smaller organisation, to deploy the telemetry updates?

                  • by dbIII ( 701233 )

                    What large corporate IT department has their executives running any version of Windows Pro on their laptops, rather than Enterprise connected to their centralised update servers etc?

                    Any of them that allow their execs to buy their own stuff, which is probably most of them.

                    For the second there are a lot of MS Windows shops out there that trust Microsoft without question. Sometimes I argue with those sort of people but it is really pointless - the only solution is to firewall them off as much as possible to

      • Working for a very large Fortune 500: Our requirements before deploying 10 are essentially that it must deployable with NO telemetry to MS, NO spying, and NO ads.

        ORLY? I also work for a very large Fortune 500, actually one in the top 20. Our requirements for Windows 10 are close to none existent. Microsoft is a strategic partner and we already have approval from on high to use Onedrive for confidential data, all of MS's cloud offerings, Office 365 etc etc, and the only reason we haven't rolled out windows 10 yet is that there's still an argument over the hardware platform and we're not preparing the damn image and doing all the testing twice.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        There is one huge problem with that, buried way down in the EULA you still agree to it and so it might not come with telemetry and spying and ads but how exactly are you going to keep that shit out, any patch at any time and M$ can stick it right back in there. Hell, the code is right in there from day one and can be activated with any built in buried config change, which can be done with any patch at any time and your security is done. Now consider how many billions can be garnered with insider trading on

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Working for a small IT security company: Our requirements are exactly the same, because a) we want it and (more important) b) our customers begin to insist on it so their data does not get spied on. If nothing else helps, we will go with Office jailed in a no-network VM and the rest on Linux.

  • Just search for wsus server update windows 1607. After updating to 1607, it won't connect to the wsus server until you manually apply patches to the machine. I made that mistake of installing, but luckily I did a test run of only 10 computers.
  • by ilsaloving ( 1534307 ) on Thursday December 01, 2016 @03:00PM (#53403187)

    We were trialing a handful of Lenovo laptops running Windows 10 Enterprise. When the Anniversary update came, almost all of them got hosed. Most were recoverable after wasting a couple hours fiddling. One was so hosed that I gave up, reformatted the drive, and installed Windows 7 Pro.

    It was that event that solidified my loathing for Windows 10. Microsoft cares more about siphoning your personal data now than putting out even a minimally viable product.

    • Wait... you are using Enterprise versions but you are not using WSUS to manage updates?

      • Like I said, it's was a limited experiment. We actually use Windows 7 Pro generally, but since Microsoft has decided to take away fundamental controls from every edition lower than Windows 10 Enterprise, I refused to experiment with anything lower.

        But even if we had been using WSUS, what would that have helped? The Aniv Update would have still hosed the machines, no?

        • Like I said, it's was a limited experiment. We actually use Windows 7 Pro generally, but since Microsoft has decided to take away fundamental controls from every edition lower than Windows 10 Enterprise, I refused to experiment with anything lower.

          But even if we had been using WSUS, what would that have helped? The Aniv Update would have still hosed the machines, no?

          No, as this very article is explaining, they only JUST released 1607 (anniversary update) into the WSUS channel.

          Up until now (or next patch Tuesday), 1607 has not bee in WSUS. If you wanted to deploy it, you had to grab it manually and deploy it.

          Even if it was in there, with WSUS, you simply put the test laptops into a different rollout group and don't approve the update for that group.

          • You're missing my point. Okay, so I delayed the update. Then what? I apply the update now, instead of before, and the laptops get hosed now instead of earlier.

            How do you predict that a major OS from the defacto OS vendor in the world, is going to put out a major update that trashes a bunch of computers that have been certified to run said OS?

    • Why should MS care about putting out a "minimally viable product"? It's not like customers are going to switch to something else, so it's perfectly rational for them to concentrate their efforts on siphoning your personal data.

    • This sounds more like a proof of concept in stupidity. Why would you even play with an Enterprise version of Windows if you're not carefully managing updates via WSUS?

      Why would you do an uncontrolled release of a full new OS image, something which normally is done only after considerable testing?

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      That is why my workplace's IT did not release this update. It's buggy and not ready.

  • Ready? (Score:4, Informative)

    by zuxun ( 4595339 ) on Thursday December 01, 2016 @03:07PM (#53403243)
    The Anniversary Update deleted the grub bootloader of my debian desktop when it was released a few months ago for desktop computers. I don't know if they fixed it since then.
    • by NotAPK ( 4529127 )

      Windows has always abused Linux bootloaders, but generally only during installs.

      So one has to wonder: wtf is a Windows update messing about with the bootloader at all? Perhaps the update damaged the installation, and the mindless "auto repair" features at the next boot mangled the bootloader? What a productivity killer...

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by sexconker ( 1179573 )

        Every major update to Windows 10 is essentially performed via a dirty reinstall.
        They call this progress.

        • They call this progress.

          It is. Far better than the previous utter clusterfuck of an ever expanding and increasingly spagettied windows code base.

          TBH I would prefer Linux updates come through the same way. Dependency hell is just as much of a problem for Linux as it is for Windows when there's a jump in major versions. The only good thing about Linux is they actually find and fix the bugs quickly so waiting but a few weeks is usually enough to ensure a reliable upgrade.

          • It's not progress.

            They're rolling very patch into one big blob - take it or leave it. If the latest update causes your system to crash because one patch borks some hardware or software you rely on, then you can't get the 26 other patches and ignore the one bad one until they fix it.

            Further, they force you to download what essentially amounts to a full OS image in order to patch, not just the files that have changed.

            This has no impact on the code base, and as far as dependency hell goes, Windows has had th

      • by Predius ( 560344 )

        The Anniversary 'update' is essentially an upgrade install hence why it mucked with the bootloader, just like an install.

  • Microsoft's own server operating systems cannot even reboot on Windows 10 Hyper-V without crashing, Unix runs fine.

    Server 2016 is same OS base too. No thanks until MS hires a QA department back.

    Joe Six pack checking his Facebook does not do the same QA for enterprise things like Hyper-V, PowerShell direct, exchange/outlook GPOs that all have broken in the past year.

    Windows 7 and 8.1 run just fine

    • Hyper-V??? on a desktop os?

      Server 2016 is same base OS but with less UI and other stuff running. Now 2016 may have a newer Hyper-V core then windows 10.

      • No it's identical except for some tuning and server manager. Don't believe me Google turning NT 4 workstation into NT server by 2 registry changes. Or maybe that was Windows 2000.

        Hyper-V has been part of Windows desktop since 8.0. Same core and everything from server. Only difference is lack of clustering, replica, and nic teaming.

        Just enable it under add or remove windows features if you don't want to pay for VMware workstation?

        I use it because VMware workstation sucks majorly on my Windows 8.1 desktop

    • Server 2016 is same OS base too. No thanks until MS hires a QA department back.

      What I experienced this week; the update service crashed other services out of the blue without a clue, found out nic teaming doesn't work as expected after nic 1 was disconnected, losing connections from half the network, and DHCP loadbalancing made clients disconnect from the network often for several seconds.

      Applause for Microsoft and their wondeful job of delivering a stable, high quality server OS with critical services
      • Come on! Grandma tested it. Look Facebook loads just fine on her Acer. Go release server 2016 as we had 2 million testers and no telemetry of a single NIC teaming failure!

        I know MS is bashed here often but server 2008 r2 thru 2012 r2 are actually Ok and .... RELIABLE. Yes you heard that. But without a QA department I do not know what to do when Server 2012 R2 goes EOL?

        I hate being those old whippersnappers afraid of change that scatter the IT community, but with more Oracle like per core licensing of 2016 a

  • It's only NOW fit? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Thursday December 01, 2016 @03:21PM (#53403375)

    So... the Windows versions before the one that isn't even coming out for half a year are not fit for business then?
    That will be such a comfort for all the SMB's who were forced onto the current version, regardless of their wishes.

    • You expected this to be the first Windows version where users were not beta testers? If anything, it's gotten worse.
    • So... the Windows versions before the one that isn't even coming out for half a year are not fit for business then?

      Yes but only if you have no idea how to use a Windows computer. There is no version that's not fit for business. There's only staggered release versions. The current build that most people should be on is 1607. That has been Current Branch and also the Long Term Service Branch since it was released in August, and 3 months later became the Current Branch for Business.

      Just tick defer updates in the Settings. That will put you on the CBB branch release cycle. This is an option available to EVERY Windows 10 ver

  • ... at Microsoft.

  • A little late for some quality karma whoring here but....

    We have some NVR software for our IP cameras. I thought it would be a good idea to upgrade the VM running it to windows 10. Huge mistake.. I can't fsck'ing control when the damn things reboot. (This is 10 pro)

    So I'm downgrading our NVR machines to win 7. Sorry MS, 10 works great on the desktop, my GPO objects mostly work, but this reboot thing is a HUGE issue.

  • Finally!
    It's about time that they made that piece of shit fit to be used in the business environment since it's getting more difficult to get MS Windows 7.
  • I work for a 50,000+ employees company, and we're currently completing our Windows XP to Windows 7 upgrade...

    So Windows 10? Maybe in 5 or 6 years?

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