Developer and Enterprise Features

Bash shell

At their Build developer conference, Microsoft announced that the Bash shell would be available in Windows 10 with the Anniversary Update, and they have delivered. Bash has been available in the Insider Program for quite a while, so it’s been well tested already. For those wondering why Microsoft would go to the trouble of adding another shell, the goal is to make Windows 10 more friendly for web developers who often have toolchains in Bash.

Image Source: hanselman.com

Microsoft partnered with Canonical to provide user-mode binaries, so most of the commands which work in Ubuntu will work in Windows 10 as well. The Bash shell is not running Linux in a virtual machine behind the scenes either. This is Ubuntu binaries running on Windows 10.

For those that wanted to leverage open source toolkits but could not do it on Windows before, this should be a nice addition to Windows.

Centennial Apps

Project Centennial is Microsoft’s solution for existing Win32 apps being moved forward to the new Universal Windows App (UWP) platform. With the Anniversary Update, Microsoft is bringing official support for Centennial Apps on Windows 10, where as prior to this it was all part of the testing phase.

Once a Win32 or .NET app has been converted to UWP, it will have the ability to do push notifications and have a Live Tile, just like all UWP apps. The install process is much cleaner, and uninstalling ensures that all traces of the app are gone. A converted Win32 app can be transitioned to the new XAML layout as well, which would allow for scaling of the UI much easier than any sort of DPI method.

Converted apps can also be put in the store, and updated through the store. For those that prefer to offer the app in a more traditional download and install way, the converter creates an AppX package which can be loaded onto any Windows 10 PC.

The app will have a virtualized file system and registry, and it won’t work for apps that have to run as administrator, but there are certainly some upsides to having Win32 apps converted to UWP. We’ll have to see how this goes over time, since it’s a brand new feature. Certainly apps that are no longer developed will never move to this model, it’s a smart way to at least offer the UWP platform to traditional Win32 developers.

Enterprise Features

Microsoft can’t leave out the Enterprise, since that’s a huge part of their business. The Anniversary Update brings some updates here too. Things like Windows Hello which are also usable by consumers will of course be available, but there are a couple of features targeted specifically towards the enterprise.

The first is one that we’ve heard about for about as long as Windows 10 has been around: Windows Information Protection. This feature was previously known as Enterprise Data Protection, and it is a mechanism to prevent data leaks by employees, either wittingly or unwittingly. Files can be designated as Business files based on where they are located, or where they came from, and end-users won’t be able to copy those files or their contents without switching it to a personal file, and whether or not they can do that is controlled by policy through Mobile Device Management or System Center Configuration Manager.

We’ve discussed this in the past, but there’s a great TechNet article now that the feature is being made available with this update.

The other big enterprise feature is Windows Defender Advanced Threat Protection, and yes the name is a mouthful. WDATP will help administrators detect, investigate, and respond to attacks to their infrastructure. It combines a client built-in to Windows 10 along with cloud infrastructure to provide tools and dashboards to see what’s going on now, and what’s happened in the past. It should be a powerful tool for IT admins. You can read more at TechNet as well.

Edge and Xbox Tablet Mode changes, Windows Everywhere, and Skype
Comments Locked

194 Comments

View All Comments

  • jlabelle2 - Wednesday, August 17, 2016 - link

    - Wait so now Cortana only uses Edge and Bing?

    As much as Google Now on Android only use Google, and Siri is only using Safari and...
  • Gurdas - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    For those who can't wait, here's how to get the update right away:

    https://blogs.windows.com/windowsexperience/2016/0...
  • SteelRing - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    Please, someone, come up with something to strangle and kill Cortana. I just knew it they gonna force it down your throat once they reeled everyone to upgrade to Win10. So glad I didnt do any of my Win7 machines.
  • Michael Bay - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    Nobody`s forcing you to use it. First thing I did after installing 10 was killing the icon and fogetting it existed.
  • Freakie - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    Looks like we might be limited to just blocking it in our firewalls. I have Cortana and Telemetry disabled in both Group Policy and the IP's blocked in my firewall. I always have my firewall set to ask me what to do when it encounters a connection that I haven't created an Allow or Deny rule for. With that, I've caught a few more phone-home's that I've been able to disable.

    To be honest I'm just waiting for the actual Windows Server 2016 to be released. Having a .edu email, I get it free through DreamSpark and the Server edition at least keeps the ability to disable all that crap. And I don't mind the slightly more complicated setup.
  • Notmyusualid - Wednesday, August 3, 2016 - link

    THIS - is on my mind.

    Win Server on my machine. That way I have complete control.

    But alas, I've not a new'ish versions' product key laying around, and I cannot be bothered with 90-day trials.
  • MANLEY7878 - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    Still waiting.
  • Penti - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    About Centennial, I'm pretty sure you don't actually convert the application to UWP but packages the Win32 app in an AppX package with sandboxing handled by a variant of App-V. So it's still a MFC application if you "convert" that, and a WPF application is still a WPF application too and so on. You currently only have access to a small subset of the UWP API's for your "converted apps". So it's mostly a sandboxed Win32-package with lot's of limitations, that you can sell in the store.
  • Brett Howse - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    It's an AppX running in a sandbox, and yes it has a smaller subset of APIs available, but there's still a lot of APIs that do work with converted apps:
    https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/uwp/porti...
  • Gigaplex - Wednesday, August 3, 2016 - link

    Point is, it's still not UWP.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now