Windows To Go

 

 

Windows To Go

Windows To Go is an enterprise feature of Windows® 8 that enables the creation of a Windows To Go workspace that can be booted from a USB-connected external drive on PCs that meet the Windows 7 or Windows 8 certification requirements, regardless of the operating system running on the PC. Windows To Go workspaces can use the same image enterprises use for their desktops and laptops and can be managed the same way. Windows To Go is not intended to replace desktops, laptops or supplant other mobility offerings. Rather, it provides support for efficient use of resources for alternative workplace scenarios. There are some additional considerations that you should keep in mind before you start to use Windows To Go:

Windows To Go: Frequently asked questions

With Windows To Go, you can create a copy of Windows 8 on a USB drive and then use it wherever you go. If you’re working from home or traveling, just insert the USB drive in your Windows 7 or Windows 8 PC and you can open and use all the apps and files you need to get your work done. For more info, see Start your PC from a Windows To Go workspace. ( http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows-8/start-windows-to-go-workspace )

What is a Windows To Go workspace? ( http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows-8/windows-to-go-faqs )
A Windows To Go workspace consists of the Windows 8 operating system on a USB drive as well as all the files, folders, and apps that were copied over when the workspace was created.

How do I stop using my Windows To Go workspace and continue working on my PC?
Shut down your Windows To Go workspace, remove the drive, and then start your PC. You shut down your workspace the same way you shut down your PC.

Warning

 It’s important that you shut down your Windows To Go workspace completely before you remove the USB drive that contains it; otherwise, you could lose data or damage the operating system. If you do remove the drive by mistake, reinsert it immediately, and wait for Windows To Go to finish shutting down.

What is a Windows image file and where can I find it? (http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows-8/windows-to-go-faqs)
A Windows image file (with a .wim extension) contains the operating system, apps, and files of the PC. When you create a Windows To Go workspace, you’ll need to choose an image file. Most of the time, Windows To Go will find the image file, but if it doesn’t, ask your system administrator for help.

What hardware is required to create a Windows To Go workspace? ( http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows-8/windows-to-go-faqs )
To help make sure that the Windows To Go workspace you create works as it should, we recommend only using devices that display the Designed for Windows logo. For a list of these devices, go to the Windows To Go: Feature overview page on the TechNet website.

Personalise your Windows with Windows 8

Personalise your Windows with Windows 8

Personalise your Start screen

You can choose how your Start screen looks.

  • To change your background, colour and lock screen picture, open the Settings charm, select Change PC Settings and then select Personalise.
  • To rearrange tiles, drag them to where you want them.
  • To see all of the apps installed on your computer, swipe from the bottom of your Start screen or right-click. To pin an app, swipe downwards or right-click it.
  • To resize or unpin your tiles, swipe down or right-click them.

Bring your apps
to life

Windows comes with apps for Mail, Messaging, Calendar, People and all the things that you need most. Sign in with your Microsoft account, connect it to your social networks and watch the apps come to life.

 

 

 

Download apps

Explore the Windows Store and you’ll find thousands of apps available to download and try. New apps are added all the time.

 

 

 


Create a picture password

Sign in by drawing on your favourite photo instead of typing a password. It’s a fun way to make Windows your own.

Windows 8 Enterprise Features-AppLocker


Windows 8 Enterprise Features-AppLocker

AppLocker helps administrators control which applications and files users can run. These include executable files, scripts, Windows® Installer files, DLLs, Packaged apps and Packaged app installers.

What does AppLocker do?
Using AppLocker, you can:
  • Define rules based on file attributes that persist across application updates such as the publisher name (derived from the digital signature), product name, file name and file version. You can also create rules based on the file path and hash.
  • Assign a rule to a security group or an individual user.
  • Create exceptions to rules. For example, you can create a rule that allows all users to run all Windows binaries to run except the Registry Editor (Regedit.exe).
  • Use audit-only mode to deploy the policy and understand its impact before enforcing it.
  • Create rules on a staging server, test them, then export them to your production environment and import them into a Group Policy Object.
  • Simplify creating and managing AppLocker rules by using Windows PowerShell cmdlets for AppLocker.

AppLocker helps reduce administrative overhead and helps reduce the organization’s cost of managing computing resources by decreasing the number of help desk calls that result from users running unapproved applications. AppLocker addresses the following application security scenarios:

  • Application inventory

    AppLocker has the ability to enforce its policy in an audit-only mode where all application access activity is registered in event logs. These events can be collected for further analysis. Windows PowerShell cmdlets also help you analyze this data programmatically.

  • Protection against unwanted software

    AppLocker has the ability to deny applications from running when you exclude them from the list of allowed applications. Once AppLocker rules are enforced in the production environment any application that is not covered by the allow rules is blocked from executing.

  • Licensing conformance

    AppLocker can help you create rules that preclude unlicensed software from running and restricting licensed software to authorized users.

  • Software standardization

    AppLocker policies can be configured to allow only supported or approved applications to run on computers within a business group. This permits a more uniform application deployment.

  • Manageability improvement

    AppLocker includes a number of improvements in manageability as compared to its predecessor Software Restriction Policies (SRP). Importing and exporting policies, automatic generation of rules from multiple files, audit-only mode deployment and PowerShell cmdlets are a few of the improvements over SRP.

Windows 8 Editions and Comparison

Windows 8 Edition Comparison chart

Comparison of Windows 8 editions

Features

Windows RT

Windows 8

Windows 8 Pro

Windows 8 Enterprise

Availability[14]

Pre-installed on devices

Most channels

Most channels

Volume License customers

Architecture

ARM (32-bit)

IA-32 (32-bit) or x64 (64-bit)

IA-32 (32-bit) or x64 (64-bit)

IA-32 (32-bit) or x64 (64-bit)

Maximum physical memory (RAM)[15]

?

4 GB on IA-32
128 GB on x64

4 GB on IA-32
512 GB on x64

4 GB on IA-32
512 GB on x64

Trusted boot

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Picture password

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Start screen, Semantic Zoom, Live Tiles

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Touch and Thumb keyboard

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Language packs

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Updated File Explorer

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Standard apps[a]

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

File History

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Refresh and reset of OS

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Play To

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Connected standby

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Windows Update

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Windows Defender

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Better multi-monitor support

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

New Windows Task Manager

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

ISO image and VHD mounting

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Mobile broadband features

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Microsoft account integration

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Internet Explorer 10

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

SmartScreen

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Windows Store

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Xbox Live app (including Xbox Live Arcade)[16][17]

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Exchange ActiveSync

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Snap

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Can connect to a VPN?

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Desktop

Partial

Yes

Yes

Yes

Supported third-party apps[4][18]

Windows Store apps only

Windows Store and desktop

Windows Store and desktop

Windows Store and desktop

Remote Desktop

Client only

Client only

Client and host

Client and host

Storage Spaces

No

Yes

Yes

Yes

Windows Media Player

No

Yes

Yes

Yes

Encryption features

Device encryption

Unavailable

BitLocker and EFS

BitLocker and EFS

Sideload Windows Store apps

Yes

No

Yes

Yes

Boot from VHD

No

No

Yes

Yes

Can join a Windows domain?

No

No

Yes

Yes

Group Policy

No

No

Yes

Yes

Hyper-V[22]

No

No

On 64-bit versions only with SLAT capable CPU

AppLocker

No

No

No

Yes

Windows To Go

No

No

No

Yes

DirectAccess

No

No

No

Yes

BranchCache

No

No

No

Yes

Can be virtualized by RemoteFX?

No

No

No

Yes

Services for Network File System[25]

No

No

No

Yes

Microsoft Office apps bundled with OS[e]

Yes

No

No

No

Windows Media Center

No

No

Via an add-in

No

Windows RT

Windows 8

Windows 8 Pro

Windows 8 Enterprise

10 Things That Windows 8 Has and Windows 7 Doesn’t

10 Things That Windows 8 Has and Windows 7 Doesn’t

Microsoft radical shift to touch-centric computing in Windows 8 is far from the only difference between the new operating system and its predecessor.
Other differences include better integrated use of the cloud, better security, more options for use of multiple monitors and more. Here’s a list of 10 key features Windows 8 offers that aren’t part of Windows 7.

The Start screen
This is the Windows 8 answer to the Start menu that has been so familiar in Windows for years. Clicking on the Start button in the lower-left corner yielded the Start menu, a pop-up box listing apps that have been pinned there as well as quick access to search, Control Panel, Devices and Printers, photos, documents and importantly the Shut Down button to turn the machine off.
The Start menu is gone. It is replaced by the Start screen, a horizontally browsable collection of Windows 8 tiles that give one-tap access to the applications loaded on the device. Missing is Control Panel.
With a keyboard attached to a Windows 8 device, pressing Win X yields a popup box containing some of the Start menu items, but not all. You can also access some of the old Start menu features by swiping in from the left side of the screen to reveal the Charms menu, which contains a Settings charm that doesn’t lead to all the features that were contained in the Start menu.
This has caused much distress among longtime Windows users, so much so that third-party developers are selling Start Menu apps for Windows 8. These include SweetLabs’ Pokki, Lee-Soft’s ViStart 8 and Stardock’s Start8.

Snap apps
In Windows 8 users can display two applications at the same time, one occupying about three-quarters of the screen on either the left or right, the other app occupying the rest. With a touch screen, sliding the bar separating the two apps can make them larger or smaller. Both apps work.
Snap is handy if someone is working on a document, for example, and wants to draw information from a spreadsheet at the same time. But it is limited to just two apps being displayed at a time.
This differs from Windows 7 where apps can occupy as many windows as the user cares to open. Those windows can be adjusted to the exact size the user wants.

Picture password
Traditionally, users type in passwords in order to gain access to their locked computers. Windows 8 adds the picture password. When logging in, users are presented with a picture and by touching features in the photo in the right order they can unlock the device.
It’s a new password paradigm, but isn’t without criticism. One security expert calls it a “Fisher-Price toy” because swiping in the password can be stolen by videotaping it from a distance. It’s also tricky to back up in case users forget the right points and the sequence for touching them.

Refresh and reset
When Windows 8 gets corrupted, users now have two options: refresh and reset.
The first is the less extreme of the two. It reinstalls Windows 8 but preserves personal settings and personal data. It does this by saving the settings and data on a separate partition in the hard drive, installing a fresh copy of the operating system then restoring the data and settings.
It also preserves any Windows 8 modern apps that were installed on the machine. Traditional Windows apps, however, have to be manually reinstalled.
Reset lets users start over. It wipes away the operating system, settings, data and applications and reinstalls a factory-fresh copy of Windows 8. It’s as if the machine is fresh out of the box.
Windows 8 offers what it calls a thorough option for wiping out data during a reset. If the purpose of resetting was to erase sensitive data from the hard drive and make it unrecoverable, the thorough option writes random bits over all sectors of the hard drive. While it doesn’t make the data unrecoverable, it would require expensive gear that most people can’t afford, Microsoft says.

Windows Store
An important part of Windows 8 is Windows 8 applications, called modern applications, which are built to highlight the touch-centric nature of the operating system. They are available only through the Windows Store, an online market where developers can sell their apps once they have won Microsoft certification.
The idea is to encourage development of apps customers will want in order to promote sales of Windows 8 devices. The upside is that if the development community grows as it did for Apple and the App Store, customers will have a rich assortment of fun and useful software. Also, the store can send application updates directly to users’ machines.

Secure boot, trusted boot
Secure boot ensures the operating system being booted hasn’t been corrupted by verifying that the kernel is the one that was signed with a Microsoft certificate. Trusted boot calls for launching anti-malware before the operating system itself boots in order to thwart malware that might try to disable it.
This is all new for Windows and security experts say represents a significant improvement in maintaining the integrity of the system.

Skype
Skype, which is now owned by Microsoft, is integrated into Windows 8. That is, if customers buy the Skype application at the Windows Store, the app integrates with certain other apps such as the People app where the contact information for individuals is stored in the cloud and managed. Skype friends are automatically listed there. The Skype tile that appears on the Start screen is live and displays the most recent missed calls and pending messages.
Users can call others who have Skype clients or with a new dial pad in the application can call phones on the public network using prepaid minutes.

ARM
Before Windows 8, hardware for Windows machines had to be based on x86 processors — the old WinTel model. But that changes with Windows 8.
A special version of Windows 8 called Windows RT is not only designed for devices with ARM processors, the only way you can buy it is packaged with the ARM hardware. Microsoft itself is breaking its longstanding tradition of letting its OEM partners bundle Windows software with hardware by introducing Surface RT, a Windows 8 ARM tablet with an optional keyboard.
The upside of ARM is that it consumes less power than x86 chips, extending battery life for mobile use that takes users away from power outlets.
Surface RT seems aimed at consumers who want the functionality of a tablet but also want to use traditional Microsoft productivity applications. To that end, Windows RT includes an abbreviated version of Microsoft Office. One caveat: The version of Office that comes with Windows RT devices cannot be used for commercial purposes, so a separate commercial license is needed to use Windows RT at work.

SkyDrive
Like the name suggests, SkyDrive is cloud-based storage for Windows 8 documents, photos and PC settings. It can also integrate with Windows Phone, so a copy of pictures shot with the phone are automatically sent to the SkyDrive account. With an account, users can tap into their stored resources from whatever machine is available.
Also via SkyDrive, users can share whatever is stored there with others who have been authorized to do so, making it possible to conduct a form of collaboration. SkyDrive also has APIs that are available to developers who want to incorporate access to data in the cloud as part of the apps they write.

Multi-monitor options
For those who use more than one monitor with their desktops, Windows 8 has features earlier versions of Windows lack and oftentimes giving users several options for the same feature.
For example, where should the taskbar be displayed? Windows 8 doesn’t have a right answer, but offers the option of having it on all screens, having it on all screens but displaying icons only for the applications on that particular screen or only the screen where the open application is displayed.
Windows 8 features new multi-monitor keyboard shortcuts such as for moving applications from monitor to monitor, enables dragging and dropping applications from screen to screen and displaying a single image as wallpaper so it extends from one screen to another.

Exchange Server Comparison to Earlier Versions

Exchange Server Comparison to Earlier Versions

The table below includes detailed information about differences in licensing Exchange Server 2010 compared with Exchange Server 2003 and Exchange Server 2007.

Apart from new functions, there are sever

Apart from new functions, there are several major changes for licensing Exchange 2010 compared to earlier versions:

  • The Exchange 2003 license was sold with just one CAL, while the Exchange 2007 and Exchange 2010 licenses are sold with both Standard and Enterprise CALs.
  • The Exchange 2003 CAL included rights to the Outlook client. In Exchange 2007 and Exchange 2010, the Outlook client license must be purchased separately.
  • Features for managing e-mail retention have evolved from Mailbox Manager in Exchange 2003 to Managed Folders in Exchange 2007 to Retention Policies in Exchange 2010.
  • Advanced Exchange ActiveSync mobile policies were introduced in the Exchange 2007 Enterprise CAL at SP1.
  • Unified Messaging, Managed Folders, and Per-user/Per-distribution list Journaling were introduced in the Exchange 2007 Enterprise CAL.