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الأحد، 19 فبراير 2017

Microsoft to devs: Again, here's why Universal Windows Platform matters

About two months ahead of the release of Windows 10 Creators Update, Microsoft is reminding developers again why the Universal Windows Platform (UWP) matters.

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Credit: Microsoft
Officials presented a four-hour webcast on February 8 -- which is available for on-demand viewing on Microsoft's Channel 9 -- meant to highlight developer-focused features of the Creators Update, along with some other Microsoft platforms, such as Cortana and its Microsoft Bot Framework.

The UWP is the best way for developers to reach the 400 million users who already are on Windows 10, officials said. (That 400 million figure is something Microsoft released back in September and has not updated since.)

"UWP is the best platform for the PC," said Kevin Gallo, Corporate Vice President of Microsoft's Developer Platform.

UWP applications, available from the common Windows 10 Store, are more secure and reliable, Gallo said. UWP applications can be simply installed and uninstalled, with updates delivered using differential packages.

Microsoft published a Windows Platform roadmap on its Microsoft Developer site that is meant to help developers keep track of and request Windows features that are supported, in development and under consideration, as well as submit and track bugs.

During its Developer Day webcast, Microsoft told developers it is consolidating all documentation for all of the company's products on docs.microsoft.com. The company will allow users/developers to edit and contribute to that documentation.

The Software Development Kit (SDK) for the Windows 10 Creators update, which is in preview, is officially feature-complete, officials told developers today. And Microsoft's Cortana Skills development kit, which the company discussed in December, will be available as a public preview on February 27, officials said today.

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Credit: Microsoft
Officials touted the Desktop Bridge ("Project Centennial") as enabling developers to more easily bring their Windows 7 apps to UWP by expanding the available application programming interface (API) surface.

Officials told developers that those writing applications for the Windows Holographic Platform will see their apps and games work on both the HoloLens and the coming generation of mixed-reality headsets that support the platform. Microsoft also released an Android software development kit today for "Project Rome," Microsoft's feature set that's comparable to Apple's Handoff technology.

Microsoft also touted immediate availability of the Windows SDK for Google Analytics, the core library of which works with UWP, Xamarin, Windows Forms and Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF), as well as Facebook App Install Ads, which is now available for UWP apps.

Windows 10 tip: Make your mouse pointer easier to locate

In what's seemingly an unprecedented event, Microsoft is withholding its regularly scheduled Patch Tuesday updates and patches for a month.

patchtuesdayfebrurarydelay.jpg
On February 15, the day after Microsoft's regular Patch Tuesday was scheduled, officials said its previously slated February patches would not arrive until Tuesday, March 14.

Microsoft officials said very little yesterday about the reasons the company didn't deliver its Patch Tuesday patches on the second Tuesday of the month, as has been the case for the last several years.

In an update to yesterday's blog post announcing the delay, Microsoft officials also didn't shed any new light on the reasons for the delay.

My sources told me yesterday that Microsoft was having problems with its patch build system, and that those problems resulted in the company's failure to deliver its regular Patch Tuesday patches.

Today's blog post update to yesterday's post noting that Patch Tuesday's patches were not going to happen as scheduled:

"We will deliver updates as part of the planned March Update Tuesday, March 14, 2017.

"Our top priority is to provide the best possible experience for customers in maintaining and protecting their systems. This month, we discovered a last minute issue that could impact some customers and was not resolved in time for our planned updates today.

"After considering all options, we made the decision to delay this month's updates. We apologize for any inconvenience caused by this change to the existing plan."
I asked officials tonight for more information about the reasons for the delay and was told the company had no comment beyond what's in the statement above.

Many were expecting Microsoft to provide a remedy for the unpatched Windows SMB bug which has public exploit code in the February bunch of updates.

Microsoft also was slated to commence delivery of IE Security-Only updates separately from its Windows 7/8.1 Cumulative Update patches as of February 2017 Patch Tuesday.

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Microsoft to delay its February patches to March 14


In what's apparently a remarkable occasion, Microsoft is withholding its consistently planned Fix Tuesday redesigns and fixes for a month. 

patchtuesdayfebrurarydelay.jpg 

On February 15, the day after Microsoft's standard Fix Tuesday was planned, authorities said its beforehand slated February patches would not touch base until Tuesday, Walk 14. 

Microsoft authorities said almost no yesterday in regards to the reasons the organization didn't convey its Fix Tuesday fixes on the second Tuesday of the month, as has been the situation throughout the previous quite a long while. 

In an upgrade to yesterday's blog entry declaring the deferral, Microsoft authorities likewise didn't reveal any new insight into the purposes behind the postponement. 

My sources revealed to me yesterday that Microsoft was having issues with its fix assemble framework, and that those issues brought about the organization's inability to convey its normal Fix Tuesday patches. 

Today's blog entry upgrade to yesterday's post taking note of that Fix Tuesday's patches were not going to occur as booked: 

"We will convey overhauls as a feature of the arranged Walk Upgrade Tuesday, Walk 14, 2017. 

"Our top need is to give the most ideal experience to clients in keeping up and ensuring their frameworks. This month, we found a very late issue that could affect a few clients and was not settled in time for our arranged overhauls today. 

"In the wake of considering all alternatives, we settled on the choice to defer the current month's overhauls. We apologize for any bother brought about by this change to the current arrangement." 

I approached authorities today evening time for more data about the purposes behind the deferral and was told the organization had no remark past what's in the announcement above. 

Many were anticipating that Microsoft should give a solution for the unpatched Windows SMB bug which has open adventure code in the February bundle of overhauls. 

Microsoft likewise was slated to initiate conveyance of IE Security-Just upgrades independently from its Windows 7/8.1 Aggregate Redesign fixes as of February 2017 Fix Tuesday. 

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"Windows as a service" means big, painful changes for IT pros

   


            When Microsoft rolled out the "Windows as a Service" tagline for Windows 10, most of us assumed it was just another marketing ploy.

But as we approach Windows 10's two-year anniversary, it's becoming apparent that there's some substance behind the label. And for Windows power users and IT pros, the ramifications are just beginning to become apparent.

Microsoft has published a handful of low-key technical articles covering the new rules, but some of those details have shifted over time. The maximum interval for deferring feature updates, for example, was eight months when the feature debuted in November 2015, but shrank to 180 days in the July 2016 Anniversary Update.

Even for those of us who regularly attend IT-focused conferences and keep up with deployment news, managing a Windows-based organization in this new era can be confusing. For those who are simply using Windows for day-to-day-business, the changes can appear unexpectedly. And the realization that tried-and-true workflows no longer apply isn't sitting well with some IT pros.

For the past year, I've been hearing a steady stream of complaints from longtime Windows admins and users. Consistently, those grumbles all boil down to a single objection: Because of "Windows as a service," we're losing control of our desktop PCs.

They have a point.

For the past quarter-century, businesses running Windows have been able to count on a few constants, all of which are now changing. Consider these three major shifts:

OVERLY AGGRESSIVE UPGRADE CYCLES
It used to be that you could install your preferred version of Windows and stick with it for nearly a decade. If you deployed Windows 7 Service Pack 1 when it was released in February 2011, for example, its feature set has been constant for the past six years and will remain unchanged for the remaining three years of its supported life.

In the new world, that upgrade cycle has shrunk to roughly 18 months, thanks to feature updates (the new term for upgrades) that can be deferred but not refused. This slide from a Microsoft presentation shows the support lifecycle for a Windows 10 feature update:

Image credit: Microsoft
Here's how it works in practice: If you upgraded to Windows 10 Pro one year ago, in February 2016, you got the latest release, version 1511. Six months later, Microsoft released the Anniversary Update, version 1607, to the Current Branch (CB). That version was released to the Current Branch for Business (CBB) on November 29, 2016.

An option available only in business versions (Pro/Enterprise/Education) allows you to defer feature updates until they're released to the Current Branch for Business. Using Group Policy, you can defer those updates by an additional eight months in version 1511. That means you'll be forced to upgrade to version 1607 or later in July 2017, less than a year and a half after your initial deployment.

And that upgrade cycle is going to get tighter. In version 1607, the Group Policy to defer updates shrinks from eight months to 180 days, with a 60-day grace period at the end. In addition, Microsoft has hinted that it plans to ship two feature updates per year starting in 2017. The upshot is that you should expect to upgrade every PC in your organization roughly once a year.

That's a big change. For small businesses that don't have the time or technical expertise to test each new feature update in advance, it can result in major disruptions if an update breaks compatibility with a business-critical third-party app.

ALL-OR-NOTHING UPDATES
In the good old days, each month's Patch Tuesday collection consisted of an assortment of individual updates from which you could pick and choose. The new Windows Update model packages all those security and reliability fixes into cumulative updates that can't be unbundled. Here, too, you can only postpone installation for a few weeks. "No, thanks" is not an option for an individual update.

That design has been part of Windows 10 from the start, and in recent months it's shifted to Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 as well. As a result, checking Windows Update on a Windows 7 PC today no longer returns a lengthy list of individual updates; instead, you get a single rollup like the one shown here.

Cumulative updates are the new standard in all supported Windows versions.

Microsoft's justification for this new approach makes sense, at least in theory. When Windows engineers test a new update, they use a fully patched system as the baseline. There's no way to confirm that an update will work on a PC where you've been selectively applying updates. So the new model is designed to drag the entire installed base of Windows PCs, kicking and screaming if necessary, to the same baseline configuration.

This new model will take some careful attention from IT pros, who will no longer have the option to solve a compatibility problem by uninstalling a problematic update. Using Group Policy, you can defer updates for up to 30 days as you test, but if you find a problem the only option is to delay the update for a few weeks, which means you're also skipping potentially critical security fixes.

The cumulative update model is also causing some teething pains in Redmond, where an undisclosed problem in February 2017 forced Microsoft to skip an entire Patch Tuesday cycle for the first time in history. 

THE DEATH OF THE SERVICE PACK
Windows 7 still has nearly three years left in its support lifecycle, but the one and only service pack was released more than six years ago. If you don't know the secret recipe of updates to install , a fresh installation of Windows 7 can take several days to be fully updated.

With Windows 10, Microsoft regularly releases new installation media (in ISO format) reflecting the latest feature update. But OEM recovery partitions aren't automatically updated, which means if you roll back an OEM device to its original factory configuration you have to download several gigabytes for the latest feature update and then another very large cumulative update to bring it current.

The bottom line with all these changes is that IT pros who've been used to running Windows in set-it-and-forget-it mode are going to have to begin paying closer attention, not just to what's in this month's updates but what's in the pipeline for the next year.

And don't expect Microsoft to back down on any of these decisions. There are minor changes in the pipeline to make it easier to schedule updates, but the underlying servicing and deployment models aren't likely to change.
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