6/28/2017

Understand missing keep data and app option upgrading from 2012 Server R2 to 2016

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Q. I'm trying to perform an in-place upgrade from 2012 R2 to 2016 but it will not let me select the option to keep apps and data, why?
A. The best practice for servers is to not perform an in-place upgrade but rather perform a fresh install of the OS and migrate workloads over however if you need to perform an in-place upgrade for some roles and applications this is supported. If when performing an in-place upgrade the option to keep applications and settings is not available it is likely you entered a product key for a lower SKU than currently used, for example if you have Datacenter 2012 R2 and enter a Standard 2016 key then the option to keep applications and data will not be available. You also cannot perform an in-place upgrade if you are changing the installation mode, e.g. moving from Server Core to Server with Desktop Experience.

Official Windows 10 S & Office Apps Frequently Asked Questions from Microsoft Support

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The Surface Laptop, which was officially unveiled in early May by Microsoft, is now available through multiple retail channels as of 15 June 2017.
That means support documentation is starting to come online not only for the hardware but the operating system as well.
Surface Laptop ships with a new version of Windows called Windows 10 S and it has some unique differences from its Windows 10 Home and Pro siblings.
The two biggest differences are that desktop software can not be installed on the operating system because of its higher security profile and that means only apps from the Windows Store are authorized for installation.
Secondly, the Office 365 apps are being added to the Windows Store so they can be installed on Windows 10 S, these apps are in preview right now, but eventually any Office 365 subscriber should be able to use the Windows Store versions with a valid subscription. These apps are the desktop versions but they have been brought to the Windows Store through Microsoft's Desktop Bridge - previously known as Project Centennial.
Frequently Asked Questions page has also been published on Microsoft's Support Site about the new OS and, while we had to do some speculation in early May when it was first announced, we can now turn to that FAQ for clearer answers about Windows 10 S.
An additional FAQ has been published from the Office team about Office on Windows 10 S and how the new Office 365 apps will work that are in the Windows Store.
If a Surface Laptop owner decides to upgrade to Windows 10 Professional between now and the end of 2017, they will be able to do so at no cost. However, after the new year that upgrade will cost $49.
Microsoft indicated at the announcement in early May that this upgrade process was one way only and that there would be no way to revert back to Windows 10 S. Well, over the course of the weekend several sites are reporting that the recovery image that can be downloaded from Microsoft for Surface Laptop is based on Windows 10 S and therefore does give users an option for returning to Windows 10 S however, that would be a full reinstall versus a downgrade.
I continue to look for an opportunity to go hands on with Windows 10 S and see what that experience is like and will provide full coverage when we get the opportunity to do that.

10 tips to make Windows 10 smart as you want

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1. Gauging drive use

Hard drive storage is not as limited as it once was, but it's still a good idea to know just how much room you have left on your drives and what files are taking up the most space. In Windows 10, you can find that information by navigating to the proper settings item.
Click the Notifications icon in the lower-right corner of the default Windows 10 Desktop, click the All Settings button, click System, and then click Storage in the navigation pane. Click the drive you want to examine and you should see something similar to Figure A.

Figure A

amorewin10tips.png

With this information, you can see if certain files are taking up more space than they should be or than you can afford. For example, perhaps it is time to archive all of your "what I had for lunch" photos to a different storage medium. Or perhaps your music collection is starting to outgrow your capacity. Whatever the problem, this tool will show you what needs to be moved. Just click on a section and you can move or delete the excess files to reclaim the necessary space.

2. Moving apps

If you discover that you are running out of space on a drive, you can try moving apps to another location via the Move Apps feature. Click the Notifications icon in the lower-right corner of the default Windows 10 Desktop, click the All Settings button, click System, and then click Apps & Features. Click on the app you would like to move (Figure B).

Figure B

bmorewin10tips.png

This tip is particularly useful for modern PCs that often come with two storage drives—a lower capacity SSD, designated as the system drive, and a higher capacity standard mechanical hard drive, designated as the application drive. The default installation drive for many applications is typically the system drive, but in the double drive setup, the secondary, high-capacity drive is the correct choice, which means you will have to move apps from time to time.

3. Restricting users

Another way you may want to save some storage space on your hard drive is by setting data quotas for each user of your PC. You can set the limits by opening Explorer, right-clicking the drive you want to work with, and then selecting Properties. On that screen, you want to select the Quota tab and then click the Show Quota Settings button, as shown in Figure C. Just select the Enable Quota Management checkbox and adjust the settings to your preference.

Figure C

cmorewin10tips.png

4. Adjusting views

Using default settings, File Explorer will open at the Quick Access menu. To change that behavior, open File Explorer and click the File tab in the upper-left corner. Click the Change Folder And Search Options menu item and then click the down button in the Open File Explorer To box to see a list of possibilities (Figure D). This is also where you can make changes to what files display on the Quick Access menu.

Figure D

dmorewin10tips.png

5. Enabling background scrolling

One of my favorite tweaks to Windows 10 is to enable background scrolling for program windows that are not currently in focus. For example, I sometimes need to scroll a web page displayed in my browser while I am writing in Word. By enabling background scrolling, all I have to do is hold the mouse pointer over the browser window and use the scroll button.
To turn on background scrolling, click the Notifications icon in the lower-right corner of the default Windows 10 desktop, click the All Settings button, click Devices, and then click Mouse & Touchpad in the navigation window. Change the slider button to On for the Scroll Inactive Window When I Hover Over Them setting (Figure E).

Figure E

emorewin10tips.png

6. Changing notifications

The Windows 10 Action Center is a good idea, but the default configuration can send an overwhelming number of notifications your way. You can adjust what apps send you notifications and save your sanity in the process.
Click the Notifications icon, click the All Settings button, click System, and then click Notifications & Actions. Scroll down the page to adjust notification settings to meet your particular needs (Figure F).

Figure F

fmorewin10tips.png

7. Checking privacy

Windows 10 has a reputation, accurate or not, for invading user privacy. Microsoft is aware of this perception and has taken steps to mitigate it. If you want to see what private information about you is currently stored in the cloud, navigate your browser to account.microsoft.com/privacy and review the free dashboard located there. You can view browsing history, search history, Cortana's notebook entries, and much more. You can also purge the information if you wish. (Figure G).

Figure G

gmorewin10tips.png

If you decide that you don't want all of this private information floating around, you can click the buttons on the dashboard under each category and delete the information. For example, I don't really want or need location information stored in the cloud since I don't use Cortana. So I took a moment to delete that information from the cloud.
This is also a good place to go if you want to restart Cortana because she knows you too well or if the "you" she knows is not the "you" you want her to know. Personal digital assistants like Cortana work well only when the data they have collected is spot on—sometimes you just need to start over.

8. Optimizing OneDrive

I am a big fan of OneDrive. I use it to store my writing assignments so that I can access them from anywhere. However, I really don't need to always sync every file to every device. You can optimize the settings by changing what files and folders get synced.
Right-click the OneDrive icon in the system tray on the Windows 10 Desktop and click the Settings item. On the Account tab, click Choose Folders to get a list of folders currently being synced, as shown in Figure H.

Figure H

hmorewin10tips.png

9. Removing Office install prompt

Most users are familiar with the Do You Want To Try Microsoft Office? prompt that is so typical with OEM installs of Windows 10 on new PCs. However, after about a dozen reminders, must of us would really like for our PCs to just shut up about it. It's easy to make that happen.
Click the Start menu in the lower-left corner of the Windows 10 desktop and navigate to the Get Office App shortcut in the All Apps menu. Right-click the icon and choose Uninstall to remove the application, and by extension, the prompt. (Figure I)

Figure I

imorewin10tips.png

10. Switching playback devices

Depending on where you are and what you are doing, you may have reason to change your default playback device from internal speakers to external speakers, or maybe to headphones. I like to set up my playback devices to change depending on what is connected to the PC—internal speakers, unless headphones are attached, for example.
To change default playback devices, right-click the speaker icon in the system taskbar and select Playback Devices. You should see a screen similar to Figure J. From this screen, you can choose your default devices and configure the output depending on your setup. My gaming headset, for instance, is 7.1 surround sound capable, so I want to make sure I take full advantage of it.

Figure J

jmorewin10tips.png

IT wants to manage PCs like phones with Windows 10

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When three large government departments merged to create the Australian Department of Human Services, it took the new department almost three years to migrate to Windows 7. Having gone through those “three hard years,” the IT team was determined not to fall behind again, says Mike Brett, the department’s general manager for information communication technology infrastructure. Not only did the department start its Windows 10 migration as soon as the operating system came out, but it’s also committed to adopting new releases of Windows 10 as they come along.
“It’s our intention not to get out of date and fall behind again, so we don’t have to have a big-bang Windows upgrade again,” says Brett. “We’re keen to stay current — especially where there’s an advantage to moving forward — and we’re keen not to have to do that kind of remediation again. We want to stay ahead of the game rather than playing catch-up.
“It’s a culture change for the team, but we’re trying to make it part of business as usual. Really, it’s just good IT practice.”
Which is exactly how Microsoft is hoping businesses will think about Windows as a Service, according to Michael Niehaus, director of product marketing for commercial Windows. “We’re suggesting changing Windows deployment from a project that customers do every three to five years to thinking about deployment as a process. You move to Windows 10 and then continually stay up to date with the new features as released, and the benefits are that you get security capabilities faster, you get less disruption, you get a simpler deployment process.”
windows as a serviceMicrosoft

Getting used to change

Updating Windows regularly might be less disruptive, but moving to this model is itself a big change. “On the one hand, organizations see this as potentially disruptive. At the same time, they say disruption can be good if it gets them out of the problems of the past,” Niehaus says.
With long deployment cycles, there’s a temptation to defer problems. “They’d build up technical debt,” says Niehaus. “They’d say, ‘We’re not going to deal with this now; we’ll take care of it with the next Windows upgrade in three years’ time.’ But when you do that with your apps and infrastructure, that takes the Windows upgrade project — which most organizations already thought was a big enough job — and makes it that much bigger, because now it’s not just upgrading to the next version of Windows but upgrading your infrastructure and your apps and dealing with all that technical debt.”
The solution isn’t just keeping up with Windows, says Niehaus, but modernizing IT habits generally. “Organizations need to make sure that the application owners and the business groups take responsibility for keeping line-of-business apps up to date as well. That way they can avoid this ‘kick the can down the road’ syndrome they’ve typically encountered.”
Many organizations are coming round to this point of view, says Gartner analyst Steve Kleynhans. “Everybody realizes there is a necessity to keep up, and so the majority of the customers I talk to are working at developing a process so they can keep up with feature updates as they come out.”
This acceptance comes after some initial denial, Kleynhans notes, but more frequent change is the new normal. “Lots of companies suggested to us that Microsoft is not really going to do this. Of course they are; this is just the nature of how things have changed.”
He suggests that feature updates might even arrive more quickly. “This is a very fluid market. There are new competitive pressures. This is not the last time we will have a change in what the cadence of updates is going to be and how it is going to work. We are entering a market where change is going to be continuous in every aspect of what we do.”
That can be a positive thing for IT teams, Brett suggests. “Internally, the project was a great opportunity for the staff to feel that they were playing in IT again. We had been risk-averse, and to be at the leading edge has been invigorating for them.”

Current means semiannual

Craig Dewar, senior director for commercial Windows at Microsoft, estimates that most customers that are adopting Windows as a Service have some 90% of their PCs running the Current Branch for Business (CBB, which Microsoft is renaming the Semi-Annual Channel, because it will now come out twice a year, on a fixed schedule to match Office and System Center). “They typically have something like 9% of their machines on the latest release, and then 1% on Insider builds” (referring to the Insider for Business program).
“Enterprises want to start piloting a new release as soon it comes out, starting with the IT organization, to see how productivity and line-of-business apps and devices work with it,” Niehaus notes. Typically, customers decide the new releases are ready for broad deployment after four months, he says.
The support life cycle for Windows 10 pushes businesses in this direction. With Windows releases now coming in March and September every year, the rather complicated formula of servicing for the two most recent CBB releases plus a 60 days’ grace period becomes a much clearer 18 months of support.
Kleynhans cautions against trying to use the Long Term Servicing Branch (LTSB, soon to be known as the Long Term Servicing Channel) as a way to avoid updating Windows 10. LTSB releases come out every two to three years and are supported for ten years (much longer than other branches), but this branch is intended only for specialized systems that perform a single important task and need stability more than the latest features. LTSB devices only get quality updates, they can’t run Edge or Windows Store apps (including the inbox apps such as Mail and Cortana), and you can only use an LTSB release on PCs with the CPUs that were shipping when that branch was released.
“For a lot of companies, rolling out LTSB beyond the relatively few targets in their environment where it’s required will actually create more problems with keeping up to date,” he says. “The problem is that LTSB is only certified for things that were shipping the day LTSB shipped. Any new processors, potentially any new versions of applications — for anything that comes out after LTSB ships — there's the potential that it won’t work with that LTSB and you’ll have to move to a new LTSB. You might end up having to update to a new LTSB every year. How is that better? Outside of a very narrow target, LTSB could be much harder to manage in your environment long term than just sticking with CBB.
“It's not the good old days. It’s not the Windows 7 model; what a lot of people were thinking was that LTSB would take them back to the Windows 7 model, and it’s not. It’s something different, and it’s not going to get them what they want.”
The message seems to have gotten through: The most recent survey that Microsoft did of commercial Windows customers showed only a single-digit percentage looking at LTSB for broad deployment, according to Niehaus.
Making this regular process work means striking a balance between getting experience with new features from Insider builds and not wasting time on bugs that won’t be in the final release, cautions Kleynhans. “Everybody wants access to code as early as possible, so they can start their testing processes and their familiarization processes as easy as possible. But they don’t want to get started with stuff that's breaking and causing problems that are not going to be there in production code. Organizations want to be testing their issues, not Microsoft’s issues.”
New controls in the Insider program that let IT teams see feedback and usage of Insider builds within their organization will give more control. They may also give them more influence with Microsoft. “From our side, this allows us to weight feedback more accurately,” Dewar explains. “We understand that not all feedback is equal, and one piece of feedback can represent a very large installed base. If you leave three pieces of feedback but you represent a large organization with 80,000 PCs, we would probably listen to your feedback on a security or business feature more than a home user with a single PC. Before, we didn’t have the ability to do that.”
The smaller, simpler monthly updates for security and quality make this more palatable as well. If you want more time to test non-security fixes you can now get those a couple of weeks before the monthly Cumulative Update, and System Center Configuration Manager now supports Express Updates, which download only the updates that are new to a Windows client, rather than the full Cumulative Update package. And if you want to switch to deploying updates without administrators approving them manually, you can use Windows Update for Business for that while still updating third-party and line-of-business apps through Windows Server Update Services (WSUS) using Dual Scan. (Introduced with Windows 10 version 1607, Dual Scan is being updated for version 1703 to give businesses more control over which updates are applied and when.)

Manage like mobile

As they shift the way they handle deploying Windows, many organizations are also taking the opportunity to manage those Windows PCs rather differently — more like the BYOD phones and tablets employees have been adopting than the desktop PCs of old, especially as more two-in-one devices such as the Surface Pro show up in the enterprise.
“The methods that organizations use to manage Windows devices have been more or less unchanged for the last decade or more,” Niehaus points out. “We’ve been telling the modern IT management story for a couple of years, which is that you probably have groups of employees who are mobile, who are never connected to the corporate network, who could be treated differently than the traditional corporate network-connected, workstation tower under the desk.”
Some customers experimented with this approach but there hadn’t been a significant shift in PC management until Windows 10 built in an MDM client that adds new policy options with each release.
“The big change with Windows 10 is that customers are coming back to us and saying, ‘We’ve been taking that approach for our mobile devices — and if we’re able to take a step back from our heavy-handed policies, maybe we can make that work for our entire population and take a much lighter-weight approach that’s really focused on keeping the organization safe and productive, where we don't have to be in control of everything.’”
Some organizations are already shifting to this approach, using Azure Active Directory and an MDM service such as Intune rather than Active Directory and group policy and System Center Configuration Manager, says Niehaus, but “others are plotting that course over potentially a period of years.”
According to a recent survey by analysts CCS Insight, this switch will bring desktop and mobile management teams into a single group inside IT organizations. Among respondents to the survey, 83% said that operational convergence would happen within three years, and 44% said that would happen within 12 months. That also means moving from MDM tools designed for phones to services such as Microsoft Intune and EMS that can manage both phones and PCs, noted Nicholas McQuire, vice president of enterprise research at CCS Insight.
Even though the MDM client in Windows 10 supports many of the same options as group policy, you need to think carefully about how many of those policies you apply. Mike Brett suggests IT teams approach this by asking, “How do we make the experience better? Previously we would lock everything down, which is a very easy approach for IT. Now it’s, What do we lock down that protects us, and what do we do that enhances the user experience?

Mac Office 2011 support conks out on Oct. 10

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Companies that have employees running Office for Mac 2011 have just over 100 days to replace the suite's applications with those from last year's upgrade, Office for Mac 2016.
Support ends for Office for Mac 2011 on Oct. 10, a date that Microsoft first stamped on the calendar two years ago, but has not widely publicized since. As of that date, the Redmond, Wash., developer will cease supplying patches for security vulnerabilities or fixes for other bugs.
The individual applications -- Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and Word -- will continue to operate after support ends, but companies will be taking a risk, however small, that malware exploiting an unpatched flaw will surface and compromise systems.
To receive security and non-security updates after Oct. 10, IT administrators must deploy Office for Mac 2016 or instruct workers covered by Office 365 to download and install the newer suite's applications from the subscription service's portal.
Office for Mac 2011's end-of-support deadline was originally slated for January 2016, approximately five years after the productivity package's release. But in the summer of 2015, when it was clear that 2011's successor would not be ready by early 2016, Microsoft extended its lifespan by 21 months. At the time, Microsoft cited the long-standing policy of supporting a to-be-retired product for "2 years after the successor product is released" when it added time to 2011.

Mac users: Steerage Class

The impending cutoff for Office for Mac 2011 is an issue only because Microsoft shortchanges Office for Mac users. Unlike the Windows version of Office, which receives 10 years of security support, those that run on macOS are allotted half that. Microsoft has repeatedly classified Office for Mac as aconsumer product to justify the half-measure, even for the edition labeled "Home and Business."
Nor does Microsoft update and service Office for Mac for corporate customers as it does the far more popular Windows SKU (stock-keeping unit). The latter will be upgraded with new features, Microsoft said in April,twice each year for enterprise subscribers to Office 365 ProPlus, with each release supported for 18 months before giving way to a pair of successors.
Mac editions, however, are refreshed with new tools at irregular intervals, often long after the same feature debuts in the same Windows application. (Recently, for example, Microsoft added a delivery-and/or-read receipt option to the Mac version of Outlook; that functionality has been in Outlook on Windows since 2013.) And because there are no regular, large-scale feature upgrades to Office for Mac, support is not curtailed by the release schedule as with Windows.
The difference between Offices -- the behemoth Windows on one side, the niche Mac on the other -- has been put into even starker relief recently: Microsoft has adopted March and September dates for launching new upgrades to Windows 10, Office 365 ProPlus, and last week, Windows Server, but made no similar promises for Office for Mac 2016.
It's clearly the odd app out.

Microsoft drafts new Windows Server upgrade blueprint

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Recentlly, Microsoft declared changes to how it will deal out upgrades for Windows Server, a move prompted, one analyst said, by customers' calls for a set release schedule -- just as enterprises made the case for reliable Windows 10 and Office 365 release dates.
Microsoft, not surprisingly, couched it differently, with a manager calling the decision necessary so businesses can "innovat[e] quickly" by leveraging "new operating system capabilities at a faster pace."
Whatever the ultimate motive for the modifications, the result should be familiar to IT administrators dabbling in Windows 10 or on top of recent news about Office 365. That doesn't mean there aren't questions. And answers.
What's the schedule for Windows Server updates?? Spring and fall, annually, Microsoft said, implying that, like Windows 10 and Office 365 ProPlus, Windows Server would be refreshed each March and September.
Previously, Microsoft planned to update Windows Server 2016's Nanoinstallation option two or three times a year under a Windows 10-esque "Current Branch for Business" (CBB) release tempo. Until recently, that was also the professed cadence for Windows 10.
Why the shift? According to Microsoft, the decision was driven by "the accelerating pace of change."
Some customers, said Erin Chapple, a Windows Server general manager, in apost to a company blog, wanted a fast iteration to new features in the operating system. "IT leaders frequently ask me how Windows Server is evolving to meet this new reality and how they can take advantage of new innovations at the pace their business demands," Chapple wrote.
But that doesn't make much sense: Before the scheduling announcement, Microsoft was already delivering multiple upgrades annually to Server in the form of the Nano option.
So what's the real reason? Jim Gaynor, an analyst with Directions on Microsoft, acknowledged that customers drove the decision. But he argued that they told Microsoft it needed to solidify release dates, for the same reason enterprises pushed the company to put Windows 10 on a regular, known-release schedule.
"They told Microsoft, 'We need a reliable cadence,'" Gaynor said, pointing out that the two-to-three-times-a-year updates were not nailed down. The helter-skelter schedule Microsoft hoped to use, with flexible release dates and builds shipped only when designated features were finished, was too iffy for corporate.
Those kinds of complaints triggered responses from Microsoft, which in turn had an interesting side effect: The company has been on a product release synchronization binge, with Windows 10 and then Office 365 ProPlus put on the same timetable. Now, add Windows Server to the mix.
"Starting this fall, we plan to deliver two feature updates per year, each spring and fall, aligning to the Windows and Office Semi-annual Channel release cycle," Chapple said.
What gets upgraded? More than before.
Along with firming up the schedule, Microsoft announced that it will issue twice-yearly upgrades for both Nano installations and those configured as Server Core. Previously, only Nano was upgraded on a rapid cadence.
"Server Core will now be included in the Semi-annual Channel," said Chapple. "Server Core is a 'headless' installation option of the operating system that includes all the roles and features needed to run datacenter servers and containerized traditional applications."
In his post, Chapple summarized the revised Windows Server release blueprint with a table. Computerworld's version is below.
table 1
What about support? Has that changed too? Yes and no.
When Nano was upgraded two to three times a year, Microsoft said it would support just two consecutive builds: The latest, or "N," and its predecessor, or "N-1." When N was replaced its by successor, "N+1," support for N-1 would dry up.
Under that regime and with a three-times-a-year upgrade pace, support could be as short as eight months. A twice-annual tempo might mean support lasts 12 months.
But like Windows 10 and Office 365 ProPlus, each Windows Server interim upgrade will be supported for 18 months, an increase of approximately 50%. That additional time, Chapple contended, will let enterprises "skip one of the semi-annual releases and wait to upgrade until the next release."
Figure 1 shows the start and end dates for this fall's upgrade.
figure 1Computerworld
Did Microsoft also change the labels it uses for Windows Server refreshes? Yes. In another move toward conformity, Microsoft revised the terminology for the Windows Server release "tracks."
The new naming is easiest to understand with a table, like so:
table 2Computerworld
The twice-a-year updates will be named Semi-annual Channel, matching, more or less, the nomenclature of Windows 10 and Office 365 ProPlus.
The traditional release model, with a new edition of Windows Server shipped every two or three years, remains in place but gets a name tweak. Previously called "Long-term Servicing Branch" (LTSB) to mimic Windows 10's least-changing version, it's now been dubbed "Long-term Servicing Channel," or LTSC.
Windows Server 2016, which debuted last year, is the current LTSC. It will be supported using the standard 5+5 scheme, with five years of "Mainstream" support and another five years of "Extended" support. The former expires Jan. 11, 2022, while the latter is exhausted Jan. 11, 2027.
However, customers willing to pay for the privilege may receive support for six more years atop the usual decade, for a total of 16 years. The new licensing option, titled "Premium Assurance," debuted in December. Depending on when the customer buys into the deal, each additional year runs between 5% and 12% of the current licensing cost.
When will Microsoft release the Semi-annual Channel upgrade for Windows Server? The company said the updates will ship in the spring and fall, but also dropped clues that March and September would be the designated months by using examples such as 1709 and 1803 as labels. (In Microsoft's lexicon, releases for, among other products, Windows 10, are numbered as yymm. Those examples would correlate to September 2017 and March 2018, respectively.)
It's unclear whether Microsoft will issue upgrades on the same days in September and March that are the most likely release points for Windows 10 and Office 365 ProPlus: Each month's Patch Tuesday. If Windows Server follows suit, the first upgrade would appear Sept. 12, the next on March 13, 2018.
Figure 2 shows the first two releases and their support lifecycle lengths, and illustrates how support for the two overlaps for a 12-month stretch.
figure 2

MICROSOFT OFFICE 2016 CRACK WITH SERIAL KEYS

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Microsoft Office 2016 is the new trend in the Office business. The same way there is a tie between Windows 10 and tablets, phones, desktops, and notebooks, it also creates a unique connection between coworkers in a work environment or setting with an additional layer of intelligence.
As a developer preview, the trial version of Microsoft Office 2016 had its release on March 2016 with the sole focus of speculating its administrative features in regards to multi-factor authentication, data loss protection and more. The office applications in its software depict an almost same character in comparison to the previous Microsoft Office versions; like the Office 2013, regarding its feature set and outlook. As an addition to the already existing basic office apps in the software, it also comes with a Sway app that is applicable in Delve; the Enterprise Information Aggregator, and light content creation.
Microsoft Office 2016 Screenshot Image

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