As much as I’d love to see Linux become a big player in the market, this article is completely wrong on why Microsoft is selling Windows in the cloud and the ultimate result of it.
My bet is that Windows in the cloud is being developed and will be targeted to enterprise clients that already use similar solutions for having secure environments for their employees, such as Citrix or VmWare solutions, or RDP desktops.
They don’t want to kill the desktop with the cloud, they want to steal market from older enterprise big players and increase their cloud dependency among businesses.
I agree, but I also believe that Windows desktop will become increasingly closed and limiting for those who don’t use the Enterprise versions or the new pro edition.
Windows 365 is a contingent against the growth of mobel and MacOS. You are right, it is there for business. It competes with other RDS solutions, but I think the focus is to allow business to keep old tools around while everyone is demanding iPads and MacBooks, without having to go to a third party.
Windows 12 won’t be a thing client with a subscription to a cloud PC. The economics and technology aren’t there. But a good RDS solution tied strongly to M365 is valuable for Mac users and contractors that might not be issued a company computer.
As much as I’d love to see Linux become a big player in the market, this article is completely wrong on why Microsoft is selling Windows in the cloud and the ultimate result of it.
My bet is that Windows in the cloud is being developed and will be targeted to enterprise clients that already use similar solutions for having secure environments for their employees, such as Citrix or VmWare solutions, or RDP desktops.
They don’t want to kill the desktop with the cloud, they want to steal market from older enterprise big players and increase their cloud dependency among businesses.
I agree, but I also believe that Windows desktop will become increasingly closed and limiting for those who don’t use the Enterprise versions or the new pro edition.
Windows 365 is a contingent against the growth of mobel and MacOS. You are right, it is there for business. It competes with other RDS solutions, but I think the focus is to allow business to keep old tools around while everyone is demanding iPads and MacBooks, without having to go to a third party.
Windows 12 won’t be a thing client with a subscription to a cloud PC. The economics and technology aren’t there. But a good RDS solution tied strongly to M365 is valuable for Mac users and contractors that might not be issued a company computer.