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Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC – What’s new in Windows | Microsoft Docs.対応OS/アプリケーション一覧|Desktop Central

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Difference between windows 10 enterprise ltsc and n ltsc free download
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Microsoft Enterprise. Browse All Community Hubs. Turn on suggestions. Auto-suggest helps you quickly narrow down your search results by suggesting possible matches as you type. Showing results for. Show only Search instead for. Did you mean:. Sign In. Find out more. Joe Lurie. Published PM What are we announcing today? What should I do if I need to install or upgrade to the next version, but I need the year lifecycle for my device? Senior Member. Bad move in my opinion, Microsoft.
Frequent Contributor. The reason in my opinion is simple. Li ke TLS support etc. Extended support is very unattractive by design. Regular Visitor. Barbara Joost. So this halving of support seems unfair and arbitrary, even more so when this very article implies that customers misusing LTSC is the entire reasoning behind the decision: Through in-depth conversations with customers, we have found that many who previously installed an LTSC version for information worker desktops have found that they do not require the full year lifecycle.
New Contributor. Which option is correct? Windows 10 Pro Based License 2. Windows 10 Enterprise Upgrade 3. Windows 10 Pro 2. Occasional Visitor. Microsoft still doesn’t get it. After reading the comments above, the admins who are angry about LTSC dropping to 5 years have a point. LTSC should be 10 years, standard Enterprise should be 5 years.
If your on LTSC for the 10 year support, god knows what all background functionality you will miss out on. Being on LTSC for a longer time will also get you further behind the real World so when the day comes to upgrade to say LTSC you might find yourself in a situation where your dev team has been quietly developing with VS and all of a sudden you have a migration Project on the scale of Windows XP to Windows 7.
Ofcource there are systems that are best being left alone from the fast paced outside World, but they are few and far apart. Sure the quality in Microsoft releases have gone down since they fired thier whole QA team, so please MS rethink! Actually, that’s exactly what i meant in my comment, that users don’t care for user features, so the only incentive for IT admins to install updates every 6 months is to stay secure and to get those hidden to the eye improvements DO, Autopilot, etc.
They need something useful they can get their hands on. As they don’t get it, they are just annoyed with often updates that take long to install and don’t see point in that. You want me to explain spreadsheet users how great recent DO improvements were? Of course, you can have an argument that it can save internet traffic cost and make less impact on network in DO case.
But on my previous job updates were handled via WSUS and we had unlimited broadband internet, so DO wouldn’t do much for us. Anyway, IT admins are now tasked to do big updates twice a year, users don’t see value in this. Background improvements are neat, if you have real use for them, but in the end, companies need a stable and secure OS to do work by secure i mean just monthly security updates. This can be reduced to 1 update per year. MS is touting Autopilot and Intune to be that next “image” deployment tool not really an image in the regular sense, just a set of settings that will prepare Windows for work.
But i can’t see this being used in public sector where you don’t know who will win new PC shipment tender. Could be some smallish local retailer who never heard about Autopilot.
Is the meaning right, that i will get each LTSC upgrade within ten years for free??? That will be a great feature. John, very nice overview. In fact in-place upgrades are prevented with the LTSC edition and it does require the purchase of a full new upgrade license.
WindowsChamp beat me to it. So, we have big Enterprise organization. Yep, one of those big ones that everyone knows. And of course just like everyone else on this planet scared of staying on W7 because soon will be not supported, and as result non-compliance, audit, regulators and big, big fines!
Does not sound good! So started moving with SAC. Well, because it was 1 year ago. Now got Yes, it was mess! In fact it was disaster. You were saying 09 means September? Yeah right! How about November? October was bug-fixes time ha-ha-ha! Halloween of bugs. But as you know, November is the time when things slow down. Well, many reasons. First it is new fiscal year.
First month is always slow. Besides everybody is in the Christmas mood. Santa coming to town in case you did not know. Then it is January, best time to go Dominican, Mexico or Cuba – prices doing down! Who does not like cheap vacation all-inclusive? Then February things start picking-up slowly. But hey, now business got scary, they want to test their Applications, but they don’t have time. And you know, all those 3rd party agents? Security agents? Have you heard about them?
They also may not work in So if we push we may break all machines. Risk is real, and everybody scary. But things not getting any better. Soon it will be and it only will be worse. So this is a road to perdition. What you suggest? Stay on or jump to ? What if something happens? It will be the END. And nobody want the END. Everybody want to live.
Everyone want to retire happy ha-ha-ha! Now let’s see why SAC is better as per you list : 1. Edge is missing. But Edge is disaster. You saying add this to ADFS? But do you remember we were talking about large enterprise? Don’t ask. Just believe! So for any changes we are looking months and months to implement. We disabled it in SAC anyway, so why bother? Nobody use Cortana, except MS people who present something on Ignite! App Store.
Most enterprise block it – otherwise this is a Pandora box! If users start installing what they want this will be the end! Same thing for many other things. So what really business need? They need their Applications. And they want them to work stable today, tomorrow and in 5 years, day after day. And if changes occurs so often and could break things, this is not good. Your turn! Just adding my two cents here. Most users keep their devices for an average of 5 years.
That would mean users get a new Windows version every time they change their PC as opposed to disrupting them every year or so at the risk of breaking their applications. To all those LTSC issues raised in the article, they all have a workaround or alternative so they are of no concern and I can safely dismiss them as fear-mongering designed to fit Microsoft’s agenda.
After all, let’s look at who wrote the article. The author conveniently failed to even take a peek at the recent series of upgrade disasters and delays Microsoft is facing. I think it is evident Microsoft can’t keep up with their own agenda, which has hurt their credibility. If they are to be successful at repairing the damage, first they have to earn our trust before we can take their agenda seriously by releasing stable and trustworthy upgrades that are consistently on time.
Constant delays is a clear sign of trouble. If MS can’t keep up with their own pace, what makes anyone think that the average enterprise will be able to do the same? We just don’t have the resources to go around every 6 months upgrading machines. If they slowed down the release pace to maybe once a year, and support those releases for up to 5 years, I believe Microsoft might be able to keep up with the pace, they won’t stumble as much, make it much easier for enterprises, significantly reduce the push back, and have a much more successful Win 10 upgrade path.
MS is surprisingly quiet about the 19H2 update and there are rumors it might be very minor stability update instead of a regular feature update. Although i would just scrap it and go the 1 update per year route. Nah, that’s too long. Especially with laptops. They get beaten up badly if used as laptops and carried around a lot. And they get morally old. We use the LTSC version. I originally went the route of Enterprise and had so many problems:.
Why, if they are turned OFF. We want stability, clean and lean OS that is quick and for work. The adoption of new “Features” should always be an individual companies decision, not Microsofts. All non-required features are just applications that bloat the OS and increase management.
We don’t have the staff to deal with, 6monthly Feature updates, which technically are “inplace-upgrades” and all their consistencies. I think the 3yr rotation was good, 2yrs of stability. We skipped all of Windows 8. Now I have to upgrade the OS every 2 years just to keep security updates coming down the pipe?
We just did an internal NESSUS vulnerability scan and 18 machines on and earlier came up on the report for being end of life. It used to be we bought a generation of computer preloaded with an OS like Win 7 then 5 or 6 years later those computers would be refreshed with a newer model and a newer OS like Win If you want to do feature updates fine, but keep those security updates coming down the wire.
Keith, it might help first updating to older build. Some PCs here were failing to upgrade from to Yeah, it was giving a confusing error that “some driver is incompatible”. No exact name, error, nothing. Just a button to proceed anyway. If i proceed, it works ok after the update. But this requires manual intervention. Surprisingly this works, if you first update to and then to So for failing machines i’m using this approach. Btw, we also have machines and it seems they are not going to be updated soon as application is not compatible with newer versions of Windows and there are also some political decisions to be made to move on.
I know that MS now has so many versions on their hands to support all of them for at least 5 years. But hey, there is the LTSC version to avoid this problems, no? United States English.
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