Business Features

It is no secret that a lot of businesses got stuck on Windows XP, and partly due to things like IE6 and intranet sites and apps that would only work on that platform. As we discussed, the changes to the Windows Vista’s security model made a lot of corporate apps stop working, and the changes to the driver model and minimum hardware requirements for Vista meant that existing computers could not necessarily be upgraded from XP. This was a major problem for Microsoft. Getting companies to buy into a new way of doing business does not always work out. If it was difficult to get a business to upgrade to Windows 7, you can imagine how difficult it would be to have that same business upgrade to Windows 8 with its entirely different look and feel.

Windows 10 is more than Windows 8.1 with a Start Menu, although at first glance that seems to be the case. Microsoft has put some major effort into adding features to Windows 10 specifically aimed at the business crowd.

The first change, is of course the Start Menu, which is back. The Windows 8 Start Screen was a major pain point with business, so this alone is a big benefit. Having a familiar look and feel to the OS is key to keeping workers productive, and the thought of having to train the workforce for Windows 8 was not very appealing. The previously discussed WinRT apps being able to be used in a window is also a nice feature to keep productivity up. But these changes are fairly cosmetic, and it is the features under the covers that should really help businesses, and consumers as well, to buy into Windows 10.

As many of us are aware, having to do a clean install of Windows, and then re-load all of your settings, applications, and devices, can be quite painful. Windows 10 is going to offer an in-place upgrade for users of Windows 7, Windows 8, and Windows 8.1. The upgrade will preserve apps, data, and device settings from the original install of Windows to allow for a smoother transition. On my desktop PC, I performed an in-place upgrade to view the results. Although it was extremely slow to complete (I have about 200 GB of apps and data on my main SSD so the upgrade took well over an hour) the result was exactly what was promised. All of my apps on the desktop were still in place, and I was able to get right back to where I was with Windows 8.1.

While not the first version of Windows to support an in-place upgrade, Microsoft is promising Windows 10 will be the best in-place upgrade yet. With Windows on as many devices as it is, there are likely to be some problems, but my one computer worked fine even though this is far from the release version of the software.

At the same time, Windows 10 will support the traditional wipe and install approach. My experience with this method is even more positive than the in-place upgrade. Booting off of a USB drive and installing Windows 10 on an unformatted SSD ended up taking about five minutes. Although Windows 8.1 installs are likely as fast, it is still impressive when you remember back to installing Windows 9x/XP.

Microsoft System Center dashboard sample

Microsoft is also building new runtime configuration tools to transform devices from their off-the-shelf state to fully configured business devices without having to image them. Since these tools are not available yet, I have not seen them but this may be a quicker way to set up multiple machines rather than having to manage images and driver packages for a multitude of different types of hardware. This can also allow choose-your-own-device type scenarios, with the provisioning tied to Mobile Device Management (MDM) services. Of course, traditional wipe-and-load deployment will also be supported, and Microsoft has a bevy of tools to help with this including the Microsoft Deployment Toolkit and System Center Configuration Manager.

Speaking of MDM, this is also a major new feature coming to Windows 10. Windows 8.1 offered some MDM abilities, and Windows 10 is expanding the feature set. This will allow MDM to configure Windows 10 for things such as Enterprise Data Protection policies, support for managing multiple users, full control over the Windows Store, VPN configuration, full device wipe and encryption, and more. This will allow many more businesses the ability to have device management. While Microsoft and other companies have long offered configuration management tools such as Microsoft System Center Configuration Management, the software is complex and requires a significant investment to set up and keep up to date. With Windows 10 offering comprehensive device management with MDM, this will allow companies to use the much less complex MDM tools such as Microsoft InTune.

Of course, one of the biggest concerns for any business is security. Windows 10 is also adding new features here which should result in security for both identity protection, and information protection. Identity protection is a major concern for IT departments, and as such they often employ password policies which are complicated and create user confusion, and of course extra support calls for forgotten passwords. One way in which Windows 10 is addressing this is by building in additional choices for multi-factor authentication. With Windows 10, the device itself can be one of the two factors for authentication. A second factor can be a PIN, password, or a biometric. So, effectively, a password will not be required if that is acceptable by the company's security policy. Also, Microsoft will also be allowing a smartphone to be one of the choices in multifactor authentication, and the phone will be able to connect over Bluetooth or Wi-FI to the PC to act as a remote smartcard. The technology powering this multifactor authentication is fairly familiar stuff to IT departments: a cryptographically generated key pair generated by Windows, or a certificate from an already established PKI system.

Also with identity management, Windows 10 will also offer Azure Active Directory in addition to Microsoft accounts and traditional Active Directory accounts for single sign-on.

Information Protection is also a huge concern for business. Microsoft created Bitlocker for on-device encryption to protect data files at rest, but of course if the device is running, Bitlocker cannot protect data. To address this in Windows 10, Microsoft is leveraging some of their existing technologies (ie Azure Rights Management and Active Directory Rights Management) to protect data. Microsoft is calling the new implementation Data Loss Prevention (DLP) and the new solution separates corporate and personal data and protects the information by having the files encrypted on their own. Microsoft is claiming DLP will allow corporate data to be protected without any additional work by the end user – you will not need to switch modes or change apps – which should drastically improve the ability of companies to keep track of their data and prevent it from leaking out in the event someone emails it to the incorrect recipient. Windows Phone will also support these features, which may or may not help adoption of Microsoft’s smartphone OS in the enterprise.

Windows 10 will also support policies to restrict which apps have access to corporate data. Policies will also be available to control VPN functions, including constant connectivity and which apps have access via VPN. These app-allow and app-deny lists will support both desktop and universal apps, and can be managed by MDM infrastructure.

As an attempt to keep malware at bay, Windows 10 can only allow trusted applications to be run on it. That trust can come from Microsoft, or from OEMs and organizations. A company can sign apps themselves if they wish, choose apps signed by particular software vendors, apps from the Windows Store, or all of the above.

And finally with business related features, the Windows Store will be able to function as a licensing portal for volume app purchases. Organizations can create custom stores, which can show approved apps from the Windows Store alongside company-owned apps.

Windows 8 was going to struggle with enterprise adoption for more reasons than just the start screen, but clearly Microsoft is trying to push a set of services that will entice their enterprise and business customers to try out Windows 10. A lot of the focus on the Technical Preview has been in regards to new features for business, and there is a lot to digest here.

Universal Apps and the Windows Store New Desktop Features
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  • Hixbot - Friday, November 21, 2014 - link

    It's nice to see the desktop back, honestly I have had no problem with Windows 8.1 with classic shells installed it's basically Windows 7 without aero.

    My biggest gripe is this push to a Windows store.
    Pushing WinRT and Windows store on use makes me feel like MS is just herding us into a gift shop at the end of a lousy theme park. I don't want PC devs to use the Windows store, I don't want MS to scrape money of the top of the business. I don't want another software distribution model being shoved down my throat. I like windows over android and ios because it runs win32 code. I like that coding for PC has been typically wide open for the past 35 years or so.
    Windows had a huge part in that. I've always preferred Windows over Linux simply for the enormous, almost endless supply of windows binaries of all types, especially games. MS is pushing me away, and I might just use Linux and never buy a Windows computer again. Honestly MS must really envy Apple and Google creating app stores that bring them revenue and market power. I don't want a store full of mostly crappy $1 apps for my PC. I like my PC the way it is, just improve things like UI, kernel, security, performance, features, etc etc but enough with the store. If I want software, I'll do it the old fashioned way and find it on the internet and buy it from the developers on their website, or find open-source and add free software from vibrant developer communities, or I'll even go back to buying 5.25 floppies just don't point me at another dang app store.
  • piasabird - Saturday, November 22, 2014 - link

    People just want a desktop computer to work like a desktop computer. Microsoft does not get this simple statement. Their problem is they don't understand desktop customers. One size fits all is not a good fit.
  • piasabird - Saturday, November 22, 2014 - link

    Maybe Microsoft is purposely sabotaging computers to get people to replace them?
  • piasabird - Saturday, November 22, 2014 - link

    A few days ago my Vista computer would no longer log in. I tried using the built in administrator account to fix it but after logging in all of the updates were gone and I was back to IE 9. the stupid thing would not even recognize it had networking and the services were turned off. That was a waste of time. It all started when I went downstairs and my computer was stuck at the Login Screen similar to what it might do after updating from windows update.
  • IBM650 - Sunday, November 23, 2014 - link

    Speaking of upgrading an app I used to use Azul on my IPAD, I allowed it to upgrade. now I cannot play AC3 movies, oh we removed it since Adobe said we needed to pay for some code. I bought the app and now it is unusable,
  • Aspire AV - Sunday, November 23, 2014 - link

    really it looks like a descent thing, microsoft has tried to solve the interface issue quite well by combining the features of Win 7 and Win 8 to make it more user friendly for the desktop users,, it looks a new avatar of Win 8 which is much more sustainable for the Win 7 users to switch to a new Win OS. Thats what Windows is all about. hope it bangs in the market as the Win 7. looking forward to this thing.
  • Ashwij - Monday, November 24, 2014 - link

    I am using this now on my laptop and I must say I am pleasantly surprised ! I did like the Windows 8.1 a little bit (I am a Linux user on my PC for over 6 years now) and desired to rest the version. Although the website says its a developer preview and should not be used on your main PC, it is very stable. Considering this is not even Beta( Build 9841).

    The updates are relatively less (for my 8.1 PC i get close to 500Mb updates a week), just about 12 Mb so far in a week. No crashes.

    Only issues observed - Very Old games (circa Unreal Tournament 1999) do not run even in backward compatibility mode with hardware rendering. And Google Dive sync does not work
  • Rockfella.Killswitch - Thursday, November 27, 2014 - link

    I am using the technical preview since two weeks or so. Love it to the core. Using it with ATI R7 240 gpu, 4GB corsair DDR3 ram. No issues whatsoever. Butter smooth. No major issues with drivers either. XBMC Gotham and other players run just fine. Dual display set-up also running great! MS has a winner.
  • Rockfella.Killswitch - Thursday, November 27, 2014 - link

    Been using it since two weeks. MS has a winner. Love it to the core.
  • Lerianis - Friday, November 28, 2014 - link

    And people like myself will reiterate: Windows 8 is viewed in a positive light by the majority of non-techies who have tried it. I have installed it on all but ONE of my machines and if Microsoft included Windows Media Center in Windows 8 without having to get the Professional version, I would have switched that one over as well.

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