I understood it!
In my previous article here, I had expressed some healthy skepticism about businesses allowing a variation of Windows to auto update on them.
It was a couple of days past in the article titled .
Interesting.
Here's my statement:
The component that's definitely going to be really fascinating to me will be how is Microsoft going to balance accelerated upgrading with regression testing and due diligence?
Windows is a huge company with billions of millions and customers of businesses depending on it.
One terrible update or even a couple of terrible upgrades could cripple a large number of PC's around the planet.
The important challenge with rapid upgrades is not just testing their sectional upgrade from the remainder of Windows but trying to regression evaluation hundreds of popular third party programs.
Well that seems to confirm my feelings.
Microsoft is now communicating that there are going to be two distinct manners for upgrades, based totally on customer choice:Opt-in - This mode means that Windows 10 will likely be updated on a quick-moving pace (i.e., when Microsoft rolls 'em out). This is understood to be a consumer-type upgrading mode. Included in these are security updates and fixes, but also new attributes and OS updates. Lock-down - Locked-down mode is for mission critical environments (i.e., businesses) where updates are managed centrally. This can work just like the way things occur now and won't include only security updates feature updates and fixes. Organizations will still be able to utilize their standard patching mechanisms since updates will still be delivered to WSUS servers.
Umm, which one do you believe companies will likely adopt?
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