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Extraordinary driving awaits in the Forza Horizon 3 Logitech G Car Pack

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Hot on the heels of Forza Horizon 3 winning the Best Racing/Sports award at the 2016 Game Awards, today we’re unveiling our latest car pack – the Logitech G Car Pack, which features seven amazing vehicles hand-picked to deliver driving delights during the holidays.  The car pack is included as part of the Forza Horizon 3 Car Pass, which is available as a separate purchase or as part of the Ultimate Edition of Forza Horizon 3 in the Windows Store. You can also get the car pack as a standalone purchase for $6.99 in the Xbox Store.

Leading off the pack is the Bentley EXP 10 Speed 6 Concept. Sure, it might not be drivable in the real world yet, but it’s easy to appreciate this car’s beautiful melding of performance and luxury in Forza Horizon 3.

The remaining roster in the Logitech G Car Pack is deep in unique driving experiences. The Morgan 3 Wheeler makes its Forza debut, with its unique design making it a highly requested car from fans all over the world. The Morgan is paired with early-American muscle in the 1965 Pontiac GTO and long-awaited imports like the 1992 Toyota Supra. There’s also Jaguar’s SUV debut and the latest speedster from Mercedes-AMG, alongside an Australian rarity in the 1996 HSV GTSR.

Head over to Xbox Wire for a closer look at each of the vehicles in the Logitech Car Pack!

The post Extraordinary driving awaits in the Forza Horizon 3 Logitech G Car Pack appeared first on Windows Experience Blog.


The paperless journey of Bear Creek Middle School and OneNote

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Today’s post was written by Darren Clay, assistant principal and MIE at Bear Creek Middle School in Fairburn, Georgia.

A Microsoft Showcase School connection call with Mark Sparvell last November forever changed the landscape of Bear Creek Middle School (grades 6-8). It was during that call that the Bear Creek leadership team became inspired to use Microsoft tools to change the path and pace by which students learn. In conjunction with the district’s personalized learning initiative, Bear Creek recently began a paperless school model through the use of the OneNote Class Notebooks. Bear Creek—located just south of Atlanta, Georgia, in the Fulton County School District—implemented a 1:1 device initiative, which provides over 1,100 students with a Windows 10 Dell laptop. As an Office 365 school, the transition to OneNote Class Notebooks has been seamless.

To ensure effective implementation of their paperless school model, Bear Creek has taken a grassroots approach to transform instructional practices. The implementation of OneNote started with the school leadership team. Anthony Newbold and Darren Clay, the school principal and assistant principal, have recently been named Microsoft Innovative Educator Experts, making them a rare combination of school-based leaders. After finalizing school budgets this past summer, Anthony and Darren met with Kali Aflord, an instructional technology specialist from the Kennesaw State University (KSU) iTeach group. They collaborated to strategize on ways to maximize on technological resources. The conversation between the three revealed an excessive amount of money and instructional time being dedicated on using and distributing paper. They estimated that passing out 30 sheets of paper takes about 90 seconds. Over the course of a 190-day school year that equates to 4.75 hours of lost instructional time in one class. By leveraging the OneNote Class Notebook, that 90 seconds of passing out paper diminishes to just 9 seconds and only 28.5 minutes of lost instructional time over the course of the school year. Reviewing the previous year’s budget indicated an excess of $30,000 allocated for purchasing paper and maintaining three copy machines. These findings led Bear Creek to a goal of going paperless by the end of the school year.

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Anthony, Kali and Darren knew that transitioning to OneNote would break away from traditional classroom practices that for decades had been reliant on heavy paper use. However, for this initiative to be a success there would need to be strong and innovative support mechanisms put in place.

While designing professional development for such a robust platform, Bear Creek partnered with Kali and Alexandra Larson, another instructional technology specialist from the KSU iTeach group. Keeping the overall goal in the mind, the team developed a tiered and differentiated approach to professional development that focuses on teacher showcases and performance-based assessments. The days of “sit and get” whole group professional development are no more at Bear Creek Middle School. Enter job embedded professional development! Kali and Alexandra came into classrooms and worked one-on-one with teachers to create transformative lessons using OneNote.

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The OneNote Class Notebook is a major component of the school’s broader goal to become a fully Microsoft Innovative Educator (MIE) certified school. By the end of the year, all instructional staff members will have earned their MIE certification. The Bear Creek instructional technology department has designed a series of MIE trainings that highlight a variety of Microsoft products. With OneNote serving as the primary platform for teaching and learning, the team focused on OneNote Class Notebook and leveraged the pilot cohort during the delivery of this training series. Teachers are required to submit “MIE artifacts” to show evidence of their use of a variety of tools in the classroom. During the sessions, teachers are grouped based on their performance and competence with each tool. The beauty of the professional development framework lies in the ability of teachers to move at their own pace while receiving additional layers of support from teacher-leaders who have demonstrated mastery. After only the third month of this technology-enriched coaching model, teachers have transformed instruction in blended and virtual spaces.

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Professional development session.

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Science lab experiments in OneNote.

To begin the paperless school model, the school instructional technology department decided to begin with a pilot cohort of three teachers. The teacher trio was tasked with going completely paperless beginning on the first day of school. They worked intensely with the KSU coaches to develop Content Libraries and Collaboration Spaces within their OneNote Class Notebooks. During the initial stages, the teachers worked through learning curves and willingly shared best practices with their peers. As the pilot cohort began to share their OneNote journey with peers, the benefits of its use began to “catch fire,” which has sparked innovation in classrooms throughout the school.

Read student testimonials, staff testimonials and see the visuals that paint the picture of OneNote’s impact at Bear Creek:

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Transition to paperless classrooms via OneNote. (Classrooms in green are paperless.)

The Bear Creek teachers are most delighted about the ability to embed content from other tools such as Microsoft Forms, Sway and YouTube directly into their OneNote pages. Now, teachers feel they can safely manage their virtual learning environments because students don’t necessarily have to leave their OneNote page to access secondary tools. We have seen a tremendous increase in the use of Microsoft Forms for formative assessments in the student notebooks. In addition, teachers were introduced to the Office 365 PLC group that comes with a OneNote Notebook. Each grade level content team uses the PLC notebook to develop common lesson plans, assessments, meeting agendas/minutes and analyze student data. “This has saved the teachers time while keeping information organized and readily available. Our teachers no longer have to sift through emails to find a lesson plan. They simply access their PLC notebook,” said Anthony Newbold, Bear Creek principal. The Bear Creek leadership also take it upon themselves to lead by example by using OneNote for the faculty handbook, lesson observations, task management and team collaboration.

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PLC OneNote Notebook.

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Professional development notebook.

paperless-journey-of-bear-creek-middle-school-and-onenote-10Bear Creek plans to continue to build-in and share their story during their second annual Redefining Learning Conference (RLC). The conference will offer a series of concurrent sessions on OneNote Class Notebooks as well as other Microsoft tools. The inaugural Bear Creek RLC hosted over 1,200 attendees and featured over 130 presenters, making it the largest school-led RLC in U.S. history. The conference is shaping up to be even bigger than last year! Bear Creek is in high spirits about the educational technology movement and is honored to showcase a conference that will expose other educators to the power of OneNote.

As Bear Creek continues to evolve, the school will continue to navigate on a path that will constantly innovate the teaching and learning process.

—Darren Clay

The post The paperless journey of Bear Creek Middle School and OneNote appeared first on Office Blogs.

Windows 10 Creators Update advances security and best-in-class modern IT tools

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A few weeks ago, we announced new features coming in the Windows 10 Creators Update bringing innovation in mixed reality and 3D for everyone. We shared our view of empowering the creators in all of us as we build Windows for each of us. This rings just as true for business professionals as it does for artists and students.

We built Windows 10 for modern IT to be safer, more secure and more productive for business with access to powerful new devices and experiences for their employees. In response, our customers are upgrading to Windows 10 at an incredible pace, with a 3X increase in Windows 10 enterprise deployments over the last six months. But we’ve just begun.

Today, I’m excited to share that the Windows 10 Creators Update will deliver new features and capabilities for modern IT and bring even more security advancements to our enterprise customers as IT administrators drive digital transformation to optimize operations, enhance productivity and maintain the most secure environment possible.

Security intelligence across devices, networks and cloud

The cyber threat landscape today requires an ongoing and relentless focus on security. The Creators Update will continue to bring new security capabilities to IT administrators to better protect, defend and respond to threats on their networks and devices.

To start, we will make it easier to monitor, track and act by creating one view of Windows 10 security events in the centralized portal called the Windows Security Center. First released in the Anniversary Update, the Windows Security Center will link to Office 365 Advanced Threat Protection, via the Microsoft Intelligent Security Graph, to allow IT administrators to easily follow an attack across endpoints and email in a seamless and integrated way.

In the Creators Update we’re also adding new actions and insights in Windows Defender Advanced Threat Protection (ATP) to investigate and respond to network attacks, including sensors in memory, enriched intelligence and new remediation actions.

  • Enriched Detection. As I’ve said before, methods and means attackers use are increasingly varied, complex and well-funded. The sensors we have today across the network traffic channeled through end points and the cloud are powerful. However, cyber threats won’t stop, and neither will we. With the Creators Update we will expand Windows Defender ATP sensors to detect threats that persist only in memory or kernel level exploits. This will enable IT administrators to monitor loaded drivers and in-memory activities, and to detect various patterns of injection, reflective loading, and in-memory modifications indicating potential kernel exploits.
  • Enriched Intelligence. We already add on to our Microsoft Threat Intelligence (TI) with industry partners like FireEye iSIGHT Threat Intelligence. In the Creators Update, we’ll enable IT administrators to feed their own intelligence into the Windows Security Center for alerts on activities based on their own indicators of compromise. This added level of insight will enrich machine learning models to identify and block malware more quickly and better protect their unique environment.
  • Enhanced Remediation. We will also deliver new remediation actions in Windows Defender ATP that will give IT administrators the tools to isolate machines, collect forensics, kill and clean running processes and quarantine or block files with a single click in the Windows Security Center and further reduce response time.

Best-in-class modern IT to streamline management

It’s an exciting time to be in IT, yet we also understand that for many organizations the digital transformation can be overwhelming. That’s why we built Windows 10 with best-in-class modern IT capabilities through the power of the cloud. Already, IT administrators estimate a 15% improvement in IT management time with Windows 10. The Creators Update will further shift resources and time-intensive tasks to the cloud, allowing our customers to acquire, provision, support and secure devices more easily than ever.

Today, we’re announcing the Creators Update will bring simplified IT with new insights coming in the Windows Analytics dashboard, in-place UEFI conversion, a new mobile application management feature and continued improvements to Windows as a service.

Cloud-based insights with Windows Analytics.

We released Windows Upgrade Analytics to help customers move to Windows 10 more quickly by analyzing their environment to identify app compatibility, device and driver readiness. In the coming months, we’ll be delivering additional resources to the Windows Analytics dashboard that will help IT administrators better manage and support Windows 10 devices. The additions to the dashboard will enable organizations to use their own telemetry to provide new insights and ensure compliance on the upgrade, update and device health processes within their organizations.

In-place UEFI conversion

We’ve heard from our customers that they want to take advantage of new Windows 10 security investments like Device Guard on their existing modern hardware, but many of these new features require UEFI-enabled devices. For those customers who have already provisioned modern Windows PCs that support UEFI but installed Windows 7 using legacy BIOS, converting a device to UEFI required an IT manager to repartition the disc and reconfigure the firmware. This meant they would need to physically touch each device in their enterprise. With the Creators Update, we will introduce a simple conversion tool that automates this previously manual work. This conversion tool can be integrated with management tools such as System Center Configuration Manager (SCCM) as part of the Windows 7 to Windows 10 in-place upgrade process.

Mobile application management

With the Creators Update we’re introducing mobile application management, a new feature that will protect data on personal devices without requiring the device to be enrolled in a Mobile Device Management solution. As employees use their own devices at work more and more, we are providing IT with oversight to apply policies to the applications employees use to be productive. This helps keep corporate data more secure without taking on the added responsibility of managing employees’ personal devices.

Continued improvements for Windows as a service

Finally, our enterprise customers have told us they want to better manage the size of downloads. Soon we’ll enable differential downloads for both mobile and PC devices. This means updates after the Creators Update will only include the changes that have been made since the last update, decreasing the download size by approximately 35%. We’re also working to improve System Center Configuration Manager express updates to help reduce the monthly update size by up to 90%.

We’re building Windows for each of us and for our enterprise customers that means supporting their digital transformation. Over the next few weeks, some of the Creators Update features will start to show up in Windows Insider builds. If you are not already a Windows Insider, please join us in providing feedback to help shape the final experience and empower the creators in all of us.

Rob

The post Windows 10 Creators Update advances security and best-in-class modern IT tools appeared first on Windows For Your Business.

SQL Server + Java: What’s new

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Java continues to be one of the most widely used programming languages for a variety of application scenarios and industries. The Microsoft JDBC Driver for SQL Server is used to connect Java applications to SQL Server, whether SQL Server is hosted in the cloud or on-premises, or provided as a platform-as-a-service.

With the release of SQL Server v.Next public preview on Linux and Windows, the ability to connect to SQL Server on Linux, Windows, Docker or macOS (via Docker) makes cross-platform support for all connectors, including the JDBC driver, even more important. To enable Java developers to use the newest SQL Server features, we have been updating the JDBC driver with client-side support for new features, including Always Encrypted and Azure Active Directory Authentication.

We recently open sourced the Microsoft JDBC Driver for SQL Server. In doing so, we included the Java source code on GitHub (under MIT License). By making the project available on GitHub, we hope to facilitate a quicker feedback loop for Java developers. This feedback will be used to inform the prioritization of the developed features to support the variety of Java applications that connect to SQL Server. We want to get the community involved as much as possible in the design and implementation of features and welcome pull requests. We’ve also included build scripts if you’d like to build the jars on your own.

We have also made the connector available on the Maven Central Repository. Maven is popularly used by Java developers to build projects and manage dependencies. Maven support has been one of the most popular requests for the JDBC driver, and we hope that its availability on the Central Repository will make it easier to obtain and use the JDBC driver in new and existing projects. It’s as simple as adding the JDBC driver to your Maven project’s POM file.

This connector can be used to connect Java applications to Azure SQL Database, Azure SQL Data Warehouse and SQL Server (including SQL Server v.Next public preview). We have two jars available to support JRE 7 and 8. To start using the JDBC driver or upgrade your existing JDBC driver to the newest version, you can use one of the methods below:

  • Add the corresponding JDBC jar (version 6.1.0.jre8 or 6.1.0.jre7) to your Maven project by adding it as a dependency using the code below:


com.microsoft.sqlserver
mssql-jdbc
6.1.0.jre8

  • Build the corresponding jar for your JRE version (7 or 8) on your own through Maven or Ant build scripts available on GitHub and reference it in your application.
  • Download the corresponding jar for your JRE version from Maven.

You can learn more about open sourcing the JDBC driver and support for Maven in this blog. We look forward to working more closely with the community to continue to bring the best support for Java applications connecting to SQL Server.

Get started today

  • Check out the JDBC driver source code on GitHub! Make pull requests and let us know what you think.
  • Add the JDBC driver from the Central Repository to your POM file in your Maven project.
  • Try the new getting started tutorials that show you how to:
    • Install SQL Server on Linux/macOS/Docker/Windows
    • Create a simple app using Java and other popular programming languages with SQL Server
    • Create a simple app using popular web frameworks and Object Relational Mapping (ORM) frameworks with SQL Server
    • Use cool SQL Server features that can make your apps shine

Connect with us

Learn more

Other videos in this series

What’s new in Mobile Reports in SQL Server 2016 SP1

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In our last post around SQL Server 2016 SP1, we promised to do a post about some enhancements we’ve made to mobile reports in the latest release.  We’ll highlight two major items we’ve updated and also provide the full change list of updates and fixes for mobile reports that many of you have asked for to date.

Improved support for dates from MDX queries

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One major item was improved recognition of dates from MDX queries without using the currently published workaround, which was required when using the MDX Query Designer in Report Builder.  This has been fixed in SQL Server 2016 SP1 when used in tandem with the latest release of Report Builder (or SQL Server Data Tools).  To try this new functionality out, create a simple MDX query using the Query Designer that includes a date field from your data model.  When you consume that shared dataset with Mobile Report Publisher, it will properly recognize the date field from your query without an additional calculated measure being required.

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User-friendly field names

Another improvement is the ability to display field names from your datasets without underscores.  Previously, when a data field name contained a space, Mobile Report Publisher would add underscores automatically to the field in the data preview tab AND on your report canvas.  This wasn’t the best looking way to show field names to end users.

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Now, when you add the same item to the report canvas, the system will remove the underscores automatically and display the name properly on the reports.

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In addition to these changes, we’ve provided a full list of updates and bug fixes we’ve made for mobile reports in an Excel Workbook you can download and view.

Try it now and send us your feedback!

WMF 5.1 Releasing January 2017

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We previously announced that the Windows Management Framework (WMF) 5.1 would release shortly after the GA release of Windows Server 2016, however the PowerShell team found some issues with upgrades that could affect a small set of our customers.  We are resolving these issues now, and target early January for the release of WMF 5.1 to the public.

We understand there is pent-up demand for this release. WMF 5.1 provides important enhancements over WMF 5.0, and removes WMF5.0’s need for installing WMF 4.0 first, on Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2.

WMF upgrades previous versions of the Windows management stack. Upgrade code is complex, and getting this correct with WMF 5.1 has taken some time. We are close to the final bits we plan to release, but want to ensure we are able to support upgrades correctly for all of our users. As a note, learning from WMF5.0, we also feel it is important to avoid releasing near the December holiday season in the US, so that that the full PowerShell team is available immediately after we release to answer any questions that arise from the new features we have built into this product.

So, thank you for your patience. We look forward to delighting you with WMF 5.1.

The week in .NET – On .NET on MyGet – FlexViewer – I Expect You To Die

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To read last week’s post, see The week in .NET – Cosmos on On.NET, GongSolutions.WPF.DragDrop, Transistor.

On .NET

Last week, we had Xavier Decoster and Maarten Belliauw from MyGet on the show:

This week, we won’t record a new show, and instead I’ll post some of the videos I recorded during the MVP summit.

Package of the week: FlexViewer by ComponentOne

There are many ways to do reporting with .NET, and choosing one can be daunting. ComponentOne build, maintains, and supports a full lineup of components, including reporting. FlexViewer is an interactive report viewing component that works in WinForms, UWP, and MVC, with support for PDF, HTML, Office, and more. Their web site has a new four-minute tutorial to get you started.

FlexViewer

Game of the week: I Expect You To Die

I Expect You To Die is a puzzle game built for virtual reality. Become an elite secret agent as you attempt to survive the deadliest of situations to complete your missions. Each mission will require superb problem-solving skills, intellect and agility. I Expect You to Die can be played seated with the use of telekinesis to grab objects out of your reach. As the name suggests – you will die. A lot. Each puzzle can be solved several different ways, and each death will help bring you closer to completing your mission.

I Expect You To Die

I Expect You To Die was created Shell Games using C# and Unity. It is available for Oculus Rift and will release for PlayStation VR on December 13th.

User group meeting of the week: Using C# for Data Access in Seattle

The .NET Developer Association – Westside – Seattle user group will have a presentation on data access in C# on Tuesday, December 6.

.NET

ASP.NET

F#

Check out the F# Advent Calendar for loads of great F# blog posts for the month of December.

Check out F# Weekly for more great content from the F# community.

Xamarin

Azure

Games

And this is it for this week!

Contribute to the week in .NET

As always, this weekly post couldn’t exist without community contributions, and I’d like to thank all those who sent links and tips. The F# section is provided by Phillip Carter, the gaming section by Stacey Haffner, and the Xamarin section by Dan Rigby.

You can participate too. Did you write a great blog post, or just read one? Do you want everyone to know about an amazing new contribution or a useful library? Did you make or play a great game built on .NET?
We’d love to hear from you, and feature your contributions on future posts:

This week’s post (and future posts) also contains news I first read on The ASP.NET Community Standup, on Weekly Xamarin, on F# weekly, and on Chris Alcock’s The Morning Brew.

MSRT December 2016 addresses Clodaconas, which serves unsolicited ads through DNS hijacking

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In this month’s Microsoft Malicious Software Removal Tool (MSRT) release, we continue taking down unwanted software, the pesky threats that force onto our computers things that we neither want nor need.

BrowserModifier:Win32/Clodaconas, for instance, displays ads when you’re browsing the internet. It modifies search results pages so that you see unsolicited ads related to your searches.

For example, if you were looking for a gift to give a loved one this holiday season and are searching for “fitness tracker”, your search results page might contain an ad like this:

Screenshot of advertisements injected by Clodaconas to search results for “fitness tracker”

Figure 1. Ads injected by Clodaconas to search results for “fitness tracker”

It can also add pop-up ads when you’re visiting online retailer websites. For example, if you previously searched for “TV”, and then visited an online shop, the threat may display the following ad:

Screenshot of a pop-up ad injected by Clodaconas to online retailer pages

Figure 2. Pop-up ad injected by Clodaconas to online retailer pages

 

BrowserModifier:Win32/Clodaconas does this by hijacking your domain name server (DNS) settings.

Injecting ads through DNS hijacking

When you browse the Internet, your PC contacts a DNS server to resolve the domain of the website you’d like to access. The DNS server returns the IP address of the website, which your PC then accesses to get the content to display.

Diagram showing the normal domain name resolution by legitimate DNS servers

Figure 3. Normal domain name resolution by legitimate DNS servers

BrowserModifier:Win32/Clodaconas compromises this process to inject ads. It modifies DNS settings in your registry so that they point to a rogue DNS server. All DNS queries are therefore redirected to this DNS server, which resolves specific domains to the IP address of another attacker-controlled server.

This results in a man-in-the-middle (MITM) attack. Instead of getting content directly from the server of the website you’re accessing, your PC gets content from the MITM server. It contacts legitimate websites to get the actual content you’re looking for, but modifies it before it is displayed on your browser. This is how the unwanted ads are displayed on your search results pages or on online retail websites.

Diagram showing that In DNS hijacking, DNS requests are redirected to a rogue DNS server 

Figure 4. In DNS hijacking, DNS requests are redirected to a rogue DNS server

This method of injecting ads meets the evaluation criteria that Microsoft Malware Protection Center (MMPC) uses for identifying unwanted software. This threat modifies webpage content without your consent. It also does this without using the browser’s supported extensibility models, hence our classification of this program as unwanted software.

Using rogue root certificate

Many websites use SSL encryption to protect transactions. This mechanism also prevents the modification of content served by websites. Browsers check the validity of a website’s SSL certificate against trusted root certification authorities’ certificates stored on your PC. Browsers show a warning page or icon if a website’s certificate is not trusted.

To avoid triggering this alert, BrowserModifier:Win32/Clodaconas installs a root certificate as a trusted root certification authority. With the rogue root certificate installed, ads can be injected into encrypted content and still appear valid to the browser.

MSRT removes Clodaconas

This month, we’re adding detections for BrowserModifier:Win32/Clodaconas to Microsoft Malicious Software Removal Tool (MSRT). If your PC is infected with this threat, run MSRT to remove all related files and restore all system modifications on your PC.

You may need to clear your browser cache after the threat is removed. The browser might still hold cache of a website you recently visited, so you might still see the ads.

Prevention, detection, and recovery

Stay protected from BrowserModifier:Win32/Clodaconas and other threats:

    • Keep your Windows operating system and antivirus up-to-date; if you haven’t already, upgrade to Windows 10.
    • Use Microsoft Edge. It can:
      • Help warn you about sites that are known to be hosting exploits and other threats
      • Help protect you from social engineering attacks such as phishing and malware downloads
      • Automatically detect bad changes and protect settings
    • Use the Settings app to reset to Microsoft recommended defaults if your default apps were changed.
      • Launch the Settings app.
      • Navigate to the Default apps page.
        • From Home go to System > Default apps.
        • Click Reset.
    • Ensure your antimalware protection (such as Windows Defender and Microsoft Malicious Software Removal Tool) is up-to-date.
      • If you are using Windows Defender, you can check your exclusion settings to see whether the malware added some entries in an attempt to exclude folders from being scanned.
        • To check and remove excluded items in Windows Defender:
          1. Navigate to Settings>Update & security>Windows Defender>Add an exclusion.
          2. Go through the lists under Files and File locations, select the excluded item that you want to remove, and click Remove.
          3. Click OK to confirm.
  • Use cloud protection to help guard against the latest malware threats. It’s turned on by default for Microsoft Security Essentials and Windows Defender for Windows 10. Go to All settings>Update & security>Windows Defender and make sure that your Cloud-based Protection settings is turned On. 
  • Jody Koo

    MMPC

     


    Video: The Next Several Years of Windows Management

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    Theres a great video available today from Microsoft Mechanics about Unified Windows Management I really recommend you check it out.

    There are a lot of EMM vendors talking about Unified Windows Management right now, but most of whats available is limited to using the MDM layer on Windows 10. A legitimately unified and secure environment is much, much bigger than this, however. This video gets into what you can do to efficiently transition your organization towards modern management.

    .

     

    This transition to modern management is a topic so important that I dont think I can overstate it. For the next several years, enterprises are going to find themselves managing a mix of Windows 7, 8, and 10 devices each with their own management needs. Only Microsoft offers a solution that can account for each of these scenarios. This video is a very helpful look at how you can navigate these next several years and offer both traditional and modern management of Windows 10.

    To learn more about this important topic, take the time to read this post: Manage Windows 10 in your organization – transitioning to modern management.

    Introducing #AzureAD Pass-Through Authentication and Seamless Single Sign-on

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    Howdy folks,

    Todays news might well be our biggest news of the year. Azure AD Pass-Through Authentication and Seamless Single Sign-on are now both in public preview!

    When we talk to organizations about how they want to integrate their identity infrastructure to the cloud, we often hear the same set of requirements: Ive got to have single sign-on for my users, passwords need to stay on-premises, and I cant have any un-authenticated end points on the Internet. And make sure it is super easy.

    We heard your feedback, and now the wait is over. Im excited to announce we have added a set of new capabilities in Azure AD to meet all those requirements: Pass-Through Authentication and Seamless Single Sign-on to Azure AD Connect! These new capabilities allow customers to securely and simply integrate their on-premises identity infrastructure with Azure AD.

    Azure AD pass-through authentication

    Azure AD pass-through authentication provides a simple, secure, and scalable model for validation of passwords against your on-premises Active Directory via a simple connector deployed in the on-premises environment. This connector uses only secure outbound communications, so no DMZ is required, nor are there any unauthenticated end points on the Internet.

    Thats right. User passwords are validated against your on-premises Active Directory, without needing to deploy ADFS servers!

    We also automatically balance the load between the set of available connectors for both high availability and redundancy without requiring additional infrastructure. We made the connector super light-weight so it can be easily incorporated into your existing infrastructure and even deployed on your Active Directory controllers.

    The system works by passing the password entered on the Azure AD login page down to the on-premises connector. That connector then validates it against the on-premises domain controllers and returns the results. Weve also made sure to integrate with self-service password reset (SSPR) so that, should the user need to change their password, it can be routed back to on-premises for a complete solution. There is absolutely no caching of the password in the cloud. Find more details about this process in our documentation.

    Seamless single sign-on for all

    Single sign-on is one of the most important aspects of the end-user experience our customers think through as they move to cloud services. You need more than just single sign-on for interactions between cloud services you also need to ensure users wont have to enter their passwords over and over again.

    With the new single sign-on additions in Azure AD Connect you can enable seamless single sign-on for your corporate users (users on domain joined machines on the corporate network). In doing so, users are securely authenticated with Kerberos, just like they would be to other domain-joined resources, without needing to type passwords.

    The beauty of this solution is that it doesnt require any additional infrastructure on-premises since it simply uses your existing Active Directory services. This is also an opportunistic feature in that if, for some reason, a user cant obtain a Kerberos ticket for single sign-on, they will simply be prompted for their password, just as they are today. It is available for both password hash sync and Azure AD pass-through authentication customers.

    Enabling these new capabilities

    Downloadthe latest version of Azure AD Connect now to get these new capabilities! Youll find the new options in a custom install for new deployments, or, for existing deployments, when you change your sign-in method.

    clip_image002

    I encourage you to download the new version of Azure AD Connect today and start testing out these new functions.

    The fine print

    As with all previews there are some limits to what we currently support. We are working hard to ensure we provide full support across all systems. You can find the full list of supported client and operating systems in the documentation, which well be updating consistently as things change.

    Also, keep in mind that this is an authentication feature, so its best to try it out in a test environment to ensure you understand the end-user experience and how switching from one sign-on method to another will change that experience.

    And last but by no means least, its your feedback that pushes us to make improvements like this to our products, so keep it coming. I look forward to hearing what you think!

    Best regards,

    Alex Simons (Twitter: @Alex_A_Simons)

    4 things about hosting virtual meetings you can learn from TED Talks

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    4-things-about-hosting-virtual-meetings-1

    With more than a billion views, TED Talks are clearly doing something right. So, what is it that makes them such a success? Here are four tried and true techniques that some of the most viewed TED Talks have in common.

    1. They’re the right length—While there are talks up to 60 minutes, the average and most well-known length is 18 minutes or fewer, as reported by Forbes. When facing pushback on this length, TED Talks founder Chris Anderson often guides speakers to fit within the time limit by quoting President Woodrow Wilson (according to Forbes): “If it’s a 10-minute speech, it takes me all of two weeks to prepare it; if it’s a half-hour speech, it takes me a week; if I can talk as long as I want to, it requires no preparation at all. I am ready now.” Concise and strategically planned presentations are key.
    1. They focus on the right topic—Choose a topic that’s meaningful to you, that you’re knowledgeable about, and you’re comfortable talking about in depth. If you don’t believe in what you’re saying, your audience won’t either. Having something worth saying is more important than stage presence and confidence in public speaking, Anderson explains to Forbes.
    1. They use top-notch presentation skills—While having something worth saying is key, you still need presentation skills to back it up or your presentation may fall flat. Even though you might not be presenting in person, being personable and accessible is essential. According to research by the Science of People regarding the most viewed TED Talks, audiences liked the speakers just as much with the audio on as they did when the volume was muted.

    They also discovered the more hand gestures, the more successful the talk. They reported that the bottom TED Talks had an average of 124,000 views and the speakers used an average of 272 hand gestures during the 18-minute talk. The most-viewed had an average of 7,360,000 views and used an average of 465 hand gestures.

    Host large-scale meetings like a pro

    Learn how to produce compelling virtual meetings and broadcasts. Today’s technology can help, but good pre-production planning is key to your success.

    Get the eBook

    1. They’re conversational—Scripts are comforting because they help you feel like you know exactly what to say, but planning word-for-word comes off as impersonal. Instead, create an outline with talking points to allow for natural vocal variety. The Science of People discovered a direct correlation between vocal variety and Ted Talk views.

    Take your virtual meetings to the next level

    Now you know what elements to leverage to make your virtual meetings powerful, dynamic and interesting to attendees. Pair these with the features available in Skype for Business to set your virtual meetings apart. Also, check out The Ultimate Meeting Guide and learn how to run meetings that people want to attend.

    The post 4 things about hosting virtual meetings you can learn from TED Talks appeared first on Office Blogs.

    MJHS celebrates nearly 110 years of care and innovation with modern Office 365 workplace

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    Today’s post was written by Stuart Geller, vice president of information services at MJHS Health System (MJHS).

    Since “The Four Brooklyn Ladies” founded the MJHS Health System (MJHS) in 1907, we have grown into one of the largest not-for-profit health systems in greater New York. One of my challenges is to ensure that the values of a nearly 110-year-old healthcare provider are reflected in the 21st-century technology we use. With Microsoft Office 365 cloud-based business tools, our employees work productively in today’s digital world, while preserving the innovative, culturally sensitive healthcare services that are part of our history.

    Before we settled on Exchange in the cloud, we used another product as our on-premises messaging and collaboration platform. This system had significant email reliability issues and storage limitations. We needed cloud-based business productivity tools that aligned themselves with the highly-regulated healthcare industry, where we are required to meet HIPAA standards. We evaluated G Suite (formerly Google Apps for Work) but chose Office 365. First, Microsoft signed a Business Associate Agreement, something that Google was unwilling to do at the time. And we were more than satisfied that Office 365 met our strict standards around security and compliance, in everything from email retention to archiving and eDiscovery. We also use Office 365 Advanced Threat Protection that bolsters our defense against malware and phishing emails. It’s great to see Microsoft offerings evolve to keep pace with swift changes in the threat landscape.

    At the enterprise level, it’s important to use technology that works in the language of the industry. Our employees are familiar with Microsoft offerings, and the ease of transition to the new business tools was a great incentive for us. Not only does Office 365 ensure that we will always be on the latest version, but the interoperability of the different components of the suite is efficient and effortless, improving productivity.

    We pride ourselves on delivering innovative, sensitive patient care in the home. Our mobile health workers carry Windows-based devices and now they can use Office 365 to access the information they need to do their work, without returning to the office. With Office 365, mobile access to all our technology resources is easier than ever, which means more time interacting face-to-face with our clients.

    We are seeing increased interest in video conferencing across MJHS with Skype for Business Online, especially for board meetings and presentations. We are piloting the PSTN conferencing capabilities, and we are excited to make the most of the newest functionality, particularly Dynamic Conference Codes, which eliminates overlapping conference calls and protects the privacy of each meeting. By eliminating existing superfluous conferencing solutions, we expect to reduce our costs in this area by 80 percent.

    And by consolidating other third-party providers, for mobile device connectivity, archiving and eDiscovery capabilities, we have further simplified our administration and significantly reduced our overall costs. With Office 365, these types of services come standard, and once again allow us to acquire great functionality with a reduction in costs.

    The Four Brooklyn Ladies could never have imagined how much healthcare would change in the past century. However, it’s great to know that with IT tools like Office 365 we can ensure that their core values of cultural sensitivity, service and compassion are still at the forefront of our service to the community.

    —Stuart Geller

    The post MJHS celebrates nearly 110 years of care and innovation with modern Office 365 workplace appeared first on Office Blogs.

    New capabilities coming to Microsoft Enterprise Mobility + Security (EMS)

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    As 2016 draws to a close, we would like to thank you for choosing Microsoft Enterprise Mobility + Security (EMS) to protect and secure your employees as you continue to digitally transform your organizations. More than 37,000 customers and over half of the Fortune 500 have now chosen EMS.

    With EMS we continue to build on identity at the core of the solution to maximize your employees productivity while at the same time providing the necessary capabilities across security, management of devices and apps, and information protection to ensure that your critical company data is protected. Today we are expanding these capabilities even further with:

    • Pass-through authentication with Azure Active Directory, available today in preview, enables secure single sign-on to cloud resources without requiring syncing of passwords to the cloud or modification to existing on-premises network infrastructure.
    • Microsoft Intunes new Admin Console in Azure, rolling out in preview later this month, makes setting up integrated security and management scenarios across EMS services even easier.
    • Azure Information Protection updates that provide even greater flexibility and security for protecting data at the file level. These updates include support for even more types of files, integration with your on premises encryption key network, and new options for creating classification and protection policies.

    Heres more on these new capabilities and how our customers will benefit from these innovations:

    Pass-through authentication with Azure Active Directory

    Pass-through authentication now in preview, lets users securely login to cloud resources by validating their password against their on-premises Active Directory more easily than ever. This feature allows customers that cannot or do not want to store passwords in the cloud (even encrypted ones) to onboard Azure Active Directory and Office 365 without having to modify their corporate network infrastructure and install products such as Active Directory Federation Services (AD FS) or similar third party federation solutions. Pass-through authentication is set up via the Azure AD Connect admin experience as the second option for authentication along with Password Sync and AD FS.

    Azure Active Directory Connect User Sign in

    Additionally, with this new update, both Pass-through authentication and Password Synchronization authentication options will now provide seamless single sign-on to Azure AD connected applications from Windows devices.

    Preview of Microsoft Intune Admin Console in Azure

    The new Intune admin experience on Azure begins rolling out in public preview this month for new and test tenants. The new console, built in Azure, provides powerful and integrated management of core EMS security solutions, such as conditional access to corporate resources based on device, users or risk, allowing for set up and management of policies between Intune and Azure Active Directory. This new admin experience makes it easier than ever to protect tens of thousands of mobile devices.

    Azure Information Protection updates

    Protecting data at the file level throughout its lifecycle from creation to sharing to tracking and revocation regardless of where it is stored or accessed is a key priority for our customers and a unique part of the EMS solution. Since the release of Azure Information Protection in October we have been listening to customer feedback and are releasing several new capabilities. Below are a few of the highlights:

    • Give end users more focused classification and protection options with policies based on group membership.
    • Support for more non-Office file types and bulk labelling of data at rest.
    • Integrate protection with on premises keys with Hold Your Own Key (HYOK).

    Enterprise Mobility + Security Customer Stories

    As more and more customers are choosing EMS, we wanted to share with you some examples of recent customers who have been deploying and using it successfully:

    • Whole Foods is embracing identity-driven security with EMS to protect applications
    • Avanade balances data security and employee privacy with EMS

    Get started with your own Enterprise Mobility + Security deployment.

    Announcing TypeScript 2.1

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    We spread ourselves thin, but this is the moment you’ve been awaiting – TypeScript 2.1 is here!

    For those who are unfamiliar, TypeScript is a language that brings you all the new features of JavaScript, along with optional static types. This gives you an editing experience that can’t be beat, along with stronger checks against typos and bugs in your code.

    This release comes with features that we think will drastically reduce the friction of starting new projects, make the type-checker much more powerful, and give you the tools to write much more expressive code.

    To start using TypeScript you can use NuGet, or install it through npm:

    npm install -g typescript

    You can also grab the TypeScript 2.1 installer for Visual Studio 2015 after getting Update 3.

    Visual Studio Code will usually just prompt you if your TypeScript install is more up-to-date, but you can also follow instructions to use TypeScript 2.1 now with Visual Studio Code or our Sublime Text Plugin.

    We’ve written previously about some great new things 2.1 has in store, including downlevel async/await and significantly improved inference, in our announcement for TypeScript 2.1 RC, but here’s a bit more about what’s new in 2.1.

    Async Functions

    It bears repeating: downlevel async functions have arrived! That means that you can use async/await and target ES3/ES5 without using any other tools.

    Bringing downlevel async/await to TypeScript involved rewriting our emit pipeline to use tree transforms. Keeping parity meant not just that existing emit didn’t change, but that TypeScript’s emit speed was on par as well. We’re pleased to say that after several months of testing, neither have been impacted, and that TypeScript users should continue to enjoy a stable speedy experience.

    Object Rest & Spread

    We’ve been excited to deliver object rest & spread since its original proposal, and today it’s here in TypeScript 2.1. Object rest & spread is a new proposal for ES2017 that makes it much easier to partially copy, merge, and pick apart objects. The feature is already used quite a bit when using libraries like Redux.

    With object spreads, making a shallow copy of an object has never been easier:

    let copy = { ...original };

    Similarly, we can merge several different objects so that in the following example, merged will have properties from foo, bar, and baz.

    let merged = { ...foo, ...bar, ...baz };

    We can even add new properties in the process:

    let nowYoureHavingTooMuchFun = {
        hello: 100,...foo,
        world: 200,...bar,
    }

    Keep in mind that when using object spread operators, any properties in later spreads “win out” over previously created properties. So in our last example, if bar had a property named world, then bar.world would have been used instead of the one we explicitly wrote out.

    Object rests are the dual of object spreads, in that they can extract any extra properties that don’t get picked up when destructuring an element:

    let { a, b, c, ...defghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz } =alphabet;

    keyof and Lookup Types

    Many libraries take advantage of the fact that objects are (for the most part) just a map of strings to values. Given what TypeScript knows about each value’s properties, there’s a set of known strings (or keys) that you can use for lookups.

    That’s where the keyof operator comes in.

    interfacePerson {
        name:string;
        age:number;
        location:string;
    }let propName:Person;

    The above is equivalent to having written out

    let propName:"name"|"age"|"location";

    This keyof operator is actually called an index type query. It’s like a query for keys on object types, the same way that typeofcan be used as a query for types on values.

    The dual of this is indexed access types, also called lookup types. Syntactically, they look exactly like an element access, but are written as types:

    interfacePerson {
        name:string;
        age:number;
        location:string;
    }let a:Person["age"];

    This is the same as saying that n gets the type of the name property in Person. In other words:

    let a:number;

    When indexing with a union of literal types, the operator will look up each property and union the respective types together.

    // Equivalent to the type 'string | number'let nameOrAge:Person["name"|"age"];

    This pattern can be used with other parts of the type system to get type-safe lookups, serving users of libraries like Ember.

    function get<T, KextendsT>(obj:T, propertyName:K):T[K] {returnobj[propertyName];
    }let x = { foo: 10, bar: "hello!" };let foo =get(x, "foo"); // has type 'number'let bar =get(x, "bar"); // has type 'string'let oops =get(x, "wargarbl"); // error!

    Mapped Types

    Mapped types are definitely the most interesting feature in TypeScript 2.1.

    Let’s say we have a Person type:

    interfacePerson {
        name:string;
        age:number;
        location:string;
    }

    Much of the time, we want to take an existing type and make each of its properties entirely optional. With Person, we might write the following:

    interfacePartialPerson {
        name?:string;
        age?:number;
        location?:string;
    }

    Notice we had to define a completely new type.

    Similarly, we might want to perform a shallow freeze of an object:

    interfaceFrozenPerson {readonly name:string;readonly age:number;readonly location:string;
    }

    Or we might want to create a related type where all the properties are booleans.

    interfaceBooleanifiedPerson {
        name:boolean;
        age:boolean;
        location:boolean;
    }

    Notice all this repetition – ideally, much of the same information in each variant of Person could have been shared.

    Let’s take a look at how we could write BooleanifiedPerson with a mapped type.

    typeBooleanifiedPerson= {
        [Pin"name"|"age"|"location"]:boolean
    };

    Mapped types are produced by taking a union of literal types, and computing a set of properties for a new object type. They’re like list comprehensions in Python, but instead of producing new elements in a list, they produce new properties in a type.

    In the above example, TypeScript uses each literal type in "name" | "age" | "location", and produces a property of that name (i.e. properties named name, age, and location). P gets bound to each of those literal types (even though it’s not used in this example), and gives the property the type boolean.

    Right now, this new form doesn’t look ideal, but we can use the keyof operator to cut down on the typing:

    typeBooleanifiedPerson= {
        [PinkeyofPerson]:boolean
    };

    And then we can generalize it:

    typeBooleanify<T>= {
        [PinkeyofT]:boolean
    };typeBooleanifiedPerson=Booleanify<Person>;

    With mapped types, we no longer have to create new partial or readonly variants of existing types either.

    // Keep types the same, but make every property optional.typePartial<T>= {
        [PinkeyofT]?:T[P];
    };// Keep types the same, but make each property to be read-only.typeReadonly<T>= {readonly [PinkeyofT]:T[P];
    };

    Notice how we leveraged TypeScript 2.1’s new indexed access types here by writing out T[P].

    So instead of defining a completely new type like PartialPerson, we can just write Partial. Likewise, instead of repeating ourselves with FrozenPerson, we can just write Readonly!

    Partial, Readonly, Record, and Pick

    Originally, we planned to ship a type operator in TypeScript 2.1 named partial which could create an all-optional version of an existing type.
    This was useful for performing partial updates to values, like when using React‘s setState method to update component state. Now that TypeScript has mapped types, no special support has to be built into the language for partial.

    However, because the Partial and Readonly types we used above are so useful, they’ll be included in TypeScript 2.1. We’re also including two other utility types as well: Record and Pick. You can actually see how these types are implemented within lib.d.ts itself.

    Easier Imports

    TypeScript has traditionally been a bit finnicky about exactly how you can import something. This was to avoid typos and prevent users from using packages incorrectly.

    However, a lot of the time, you might just want to write a quick script and get TypeScript’s editing experience. Unfortunately, it’s pretty common that as soon as you import something you’ll get an error.

    The code `import * as lodash from

    “But I already have that package installed!” you might say.

    The problem is that TypeScript didn’t trust the import since it couldn’t find any declaration files for lodash. The fix is pretty simple:

    npm install --save @types/lodash

    But this was a consistent point of friction for developers. And while you can still compile & run your code in spite of those errors, those red squiggles can be distracting while you edit.

    So we focused on on that one core expectation:

    But I already have that package installed!

    and from that statement, the solution became obvious. We decided that TypeScript needs to be more trusting, and in TypeScript 2.1, so long as you have a package installed, you can use it.

    Do be careful though – TypeScript will assume the package has the type any, meaning you can do anything with it. If that’s not desirable, you can opt in to the old behavior with --noImplicitAny, which we actually recommend for all new TypeScript projects.

    Enjoy!

    We believe TypeScript 2.1 is a full-featured release that will make using TypeScript even easier for our existing users, and will open the doors to empower new users. 2.1 has plenty more including sharing tsconfig.json options, better support for custom elements, and support for importing helper functions, all which you can read about on our wiki.

    As always, we’d love to hear your feedback, so give 2.1 a try and let us know how you like it! Happy hacking!

    Introducing Microsoft R Server 9.0

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    This post is authored by Nagesh Pabbisetty, Partner Director of Program Management at Microsoft.

    To thrive in today’s data-driven world, businesses increasingly need more powerful analytics solutions to predict customer behavior and discover new opportunities. However, existing solutions often fail to deliver enough insights, fast enough. At Microsoft, we continue to invest deeply in advanced analytics solutions that can address these challenges, and we have some important updates to announce.

    Today, we are making Microsoft R Server 9.0 immediately available for download from MSDN and Visual Studio Dev Essentials. Packed with tons of value, and built on top of the latest open source R engine, Microsoft R Server (MRS) version 9.0 includes several exciting new capabilities:

    State-of-the-Art Machine Learning Algorithms

    MRS 9.0 takes best-of-breed ML algorithms that have been battle-tested by Microsoft on a variety of our products, and now makes them available for your use in the new MicrosoftML package. You can combine the algorithms delivered in this package with pre-existing parallel external memory algorithms such as the RevoScaleR package as well as open source innovations such as CRAN R packages to deliver the best predictive analytics. MicrosoftML includes these algorithms:

    • Fast linear learner, with support for L1 and L2 regularization.
    • Fast boosted decision tree.
    • Fast random forest.
    • Logistic regression, with support for L1 and L2 regularization.
    • GPU-accelerated Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) with convolutions.
    • Binary classification using a One-Class Support Vector Machine.

    We are releasing MicrosoftML on Windows and SQL Server today, with support for Linux and Hadoop to follow in the new year.

    Simplified Operationalization of R Models

    MRS 9.0 further improves on operationalization capabilities, allowing you to get your R models deployed ever more efficiently, regardless of whether your data resides on premises or in the cloud:

    • Expose R models as web services: Convert R models and scripts into web services with just a single line of code, and do so directly from your favorite IDE such as R Tools for Visual Studio (RTVS), RStudio, or Jupyter Notebooks. R models do not have to be translated from R to the language of the Line of Business (LoB) application.
    • Integrate more easily: With the simplified application integration experience offered by Swagger, R models can be consumed by any application written in any programming language. Bring intelligence into your applications by easily embedding powerful predictive models in them.
    • Write once and deploy in multiple platforms: Models can be trained in one environment and deployed to a different environment, on premises or in the cloud, resulting in big savings of time and money.
    • Ensure high availability: Use the active-active high availability and grid computing capabilities of MRS to scale predictive applications with your business needs.

    Embracing Spark

    MRS 9.0 now supports Spark 2.0, in addition to Spark 1.6, and also adds support for Ubuntu, complementing our support for SUSE and RedHat Linux. With these additions, we now support three distributions of Hadoop (Cloudera, Hortonworks and MapR) on three different flavors of Linux.

    This release also includes new R Server data sources for Apache Hive and Parquet that load the data into Spark DataFrames for direct analysis by ScaleR functions. This enables combining the best of Spark with the scale, speed and deployment flexibility of MRS.

    This version is also available on HDInsight, as part of Azure cloud services.

    Additional Updates

    SQL Server 2016 CTP1

    As part of SQL Server 2016 CTP1, we have updated SQL Server R Services to support the state-of-the-art ML algorithms referenced above. We made it easier, using just one single line of code, to generate T-SQL stored procedures to deploy R scripts in SQL Server, using a new SQLrutils package. We made it easier for data scientists to install and uninstall packages in SQL Server. We now also offer the OlapR package to support OLAP cubes as a data source.

    Microsoft R Open

    We are also offering an updated package of Microsoft R Open (MRO), version 3.3.2, which is built on CRAN-R 3.3.2.

    R Client 3.3.2

    We are also introducing a more powerful version of the R Client with these capabilities:

    • New MRS packages, including MicrosoftML, OlapR, MRSDeploy and SQLrutils.
    • Stay-current: We automatically check for updates and inform the user if a new release is available.
    • Support for offline installation.

    New Solution Template for Campaign Optimization

    We are offering our first in a new breed of adoption accelerators, namely the Campaign Optimization solution, with support for easy deployment to Azure VMs. Campaign optimization uses ML to increase conversion rates, helping marketers select the optimal time of day, day of the week, and channel (e.g. SMS, email or cold call), for a given marketing campaign and target segment. This solution focuses on two personas, Marketing Analysts and Data Scientists:

    1. For Marketing Analysts who need to find the optimal channels for reaching out to their target customers, the solution includes a dashboard they can use to arrive at a decision.
    2. For Data Scientists, we include the ability to deploy this solution into their Azure subscription, where they can then dive into the modelling behind the scenes and customize it for their purposes.

    You can find more information at this link.

    In Summary

    I am proud of the many MRS enhancements that our team has delivered during this calendar year, including support for Hadoop, Spark, Linux, Teradata and HDInsight, and the addition of R analytics to SQL Server 2016, to name a few.

    MRS 9.0 is a culmination of all our hard work this year. With this latest release, you have access to a powerful tool, one that supports popular operating systems and a variety of data sources, helps you create sophisticated analytics models and deploy them in the real world, efficiently and at scale. We invite you to get started with Microsoft R Server 9.0.

    Nagesh


    Learn more about the insights in Microsoft MyAnalytics

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    On today’s Microsoft Mechanics, we take a tour of the latest updates to Microsoft MyAnalytics. Catherine Pidgeon shares how to use MyAnalytics to improve work impact and success. From understanding where her time goes, to identifying areas of opportunity and gaining insight into collaboration with her most important groups, Catherine provides a comprehensive tour of current and roadmap features.

    Also, today we are announcing the availability of external contacts within your MyAnalytics experience. Now you will be able to stay up to date on how you interact with important contacts outside of your organization. Whether they are customers, partners or external staff—sometimes those you work with across organizations are the most important to your success. Now you can quickly add important external contacts to your MyAnalytics dashboard to stay updated with collaboration insights like total collaboration time, time in meetings, read percent and response time.

    insights-into-how-you-work-with-myanalytics-1

    Get email digests to have insights delivered right to your inbox

    Starting in January, the MyAnalytics email digest will deliver time and network insights right into your inbox. The digest will provide insight into your time and progress against goals to help you identify key trends that might require your action. With the quick insights delivered each week, you will now be better informed to plan ahead and ensure you’re spending your time in ways that are aligned with your goals.

    insights-into-how-you-work-with-myanalytics-2

    Already have MyAnalytics? Send us your feedback in the comments, on Twitter @_MyAnalytics­ or via the MyAnalytics UserVoice. Would you like to see your own MyAnalytics view? Start up a free E5 trial today at office.com/E5.

    Frequently asked questions

    Q. How do I add an external contact?

    A. Use the “search to add” field of the network section in your MyAnalytics dashboard to add external contacts by their full, valid email address.

    Q. When will the groups feature be available?

    A. The “My important groups” feature is currently in development and will be available for customers in the first several months of 2017.

    Q. When will the digest email be available?

    A. The digest email will start to roll out to customers in early January 2017.

    Q. How is privacy handled within MyAnalytics?

    A. Most of the information provided within MyAnalytics is already available to you, such as your time in meetings or your response time to others. In the case that this information is not already available to you, such as the company average time in meetings, the insights are aggregated and de-identified to preserve end-user privacy.

    Additionally, organizations have significant controls to ensure that MyAnalytics meets the privacy requirements of their organization. See MyAnalytics for Office 365 admins for more information.

    Q. I am an end user in an organization that has MyAnalytics and I want to learn more about it. Are there any reference materials available?

    A. To learn more, please visit MyAnalytics tips and stay connected via our UserVoice, Twitter @_MyAnalytics­ and the MyAnalytics group on the Microsoft Tech Community.

    The post Learn more about the insights in Microsoft MyAnalytics appeared first on Office Blogs.

    Azure DSC extension for Nano Server

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    NOTE: For information on OS support, and other features, please refer to our release history.

     

    We are proud to announce that the Azure DSC extension now works on Nano Server! You will need to use extension version 2.21 or above, but the functionality and cmdlets remain the same. The extension will take care of adding the DSC package to Nano Server. Nano’s smaller footprint should speed up your end-to-end deployment time.

    Look at our existing documentation to get started. You can also use use Azure Tools for Visual Studio to help your deployments along!

    Using SQL Server 2016 with R Services for campaign optimization

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    This post is authored by Nagesh Pabbisetty, Partner Director of Program Management at Microsoft

    We are happy to announce Campaign Optimization solution that leverages SQL Server 2016 with R Services. This solution shows how to apply machine learning to increase the response rate from the leads, leveraging the capability of SQL Server 2016 with R Services.

    Marketing organizations use a number of ways to reach and interact with customers. In addition to providing offers that are best suited for a target segment marketing organizations are able to target the communication medium (SMS, Email or Phone Call).  Marketing campaign optimization will review a set of offers together with a set of prospects/customers combined with the campaign business rules and figures out which offer should go out to which prospect along which channels at what time – Campaign optimization!

    We have published this in the Cortana Intelligence Solutions gallery site. The solution provides a hands on experience by deploying into your Azure subscription. The deployment is a few clicks and gets this up and running by configuring this on our most popular VM – The Data Science VM that comes loaded with all the tools that a data scientist will need. All of the code is also published in GitHub thus if you prefer running this on your own machine entirely, if you wish and instructions available on GitHub.

    We use a real world scenario by using insurance industry to model responses of the leads to the campaign. The model predictors include demographic details of the leads, historical campaign performance, and product-specific details. The model predicts the probability that each lead in the database makes a purchase from a particular channel, on each day of the week at various times of day. Recommendations on which channel, day of week and time of day to use when targeting users are based then on the channel and timing combination that the model predicts will have the highest probability a purchase being made. If the report needs to be updated this can be done via the Power BI desktop that comes pre-installed in the VM and the report can be modified.

    The solution focuses on two types of experiences

    To a Business Manager responsible for the campaign and requires the leads including the optimal channels to ensure that the leads targeted provided the highest response rate. The campaign manager uses the dashboard powered by Power BI that provides a snapshot view and ability to quickly determine the channels for leads.

    Snap shot

    Data scientists who are testing and developing solutions can work from the convenience of their R IDE on their client machine, while pushing the compute to the SQL Server machine. They can also use PowerShell scripts or via Jupyter Notebooks in addition to using and IDE like Visual Studio Tools for R all available within the VM. The completed solutions are deployed to SQL Server 2016 by embedding calls to R in stored procedures. These solutions can then be further automated with SQL Server Integration Services and SQL Server agent.

    We’d love to hear your feedback so give it a try and reach us via email here.

    Announcing Windows 10 Insider Preview Build 14986 for PC

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    Hello Windows Insiders!

    It smells like snow up in Redmond-town and you know what that means? A big ole pile o’ features to keep us company during SNOWpocalyse! Today we are excited to be releasing Windows 10 Insider Preview Build 14986 for PC to Windows Insiders in the Fast ring.

    What’s new in Build 14986

    Making Cortana awesomer:

    • Turn off your computer, change volume with voice commands: Being able to control your computer with just your voice is one of the top requests we get with Cortana, so we’re excited to say that we’ve added several new features to Cortana that let you do just that. Now you can shut down your PC just by asking Cortana. You can also restart, lock, or put the system to sleep, and raise and lower your system volume with just your voice. Give it a try and let us know what you think!

     

    • Cortana loves music: You can now use Cortana to control music playback on more of your favorite music apps (EN-US only). Starting with this build, we’ve enabled natural language compatibility for iHeartRadio and TuneIn Radio. This will work on both, above the lock screen (PC is locked) as well as below! You can try queries like…

    Play on
    Play Drake on iHeartRadio
    Play Christmas music on iHeartRadio
    Play NPR Hourly News on TuneIn
    Play jazz music on TuneIn

    Play on
    Play 90.3 on iHeartRadioPlay KUOW on TuneIn

    While you are listening to music in one of these apps, you can also use your voice to control playback and volume. With radio stations, we often want to know what that catchy tune is that has played a million times, so we added support for “What’s Playing”. Try saying “Hey Cortana, What song is Playing?” and it will work for all apps playing music. As a bonus, we made Cortana smarter by remembering the last played music app so you don’t have to say “on Groove” over and over. All you need to do is say your desired app one time, something like “Play jazz music on iHeartRadio”; then the next time, just say “Play rock music” and it will play on iHeartRadio. Please look for the Quest and give us feedback!

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    • Adding music recognition support to Chinese (Simplified): Cortana can now recognize music for customers in China. Simply tap the music notes icon in the top corner of Cortana’s home page, and Cortana will listen to whatever music is playing and use Netease to tell you what song it is. This works exactly like the feature does in English (United States). You can also say “Hey Cortana, what’s playing?” (except, in Chinese, of course, so you’d say 你好小娜,这是什么歌) and Cortana will start listening to the song.

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    • Full screen when Idle: We’ve made major improvements to Cortana’s look when using “Hey Cortana” when your PC is unlocked and idle. When your PC is in this state, asking Cortana questions will result in a gorgeous full-screen experience that is optimized for far field viewing! Give it a try by enabling “Hey Cortana” and then wait for about 10 seconds or so without touching your PC. May we recommend asking to see if it will snow tomorrow?

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    • Cortana sign-in using Azure Active Directory (AAD) identity: This capability will allow you to sign into Cortana with your work or school account instead your MSA, enabling you to use Cortana even if your organization does not support MSA. To sign in to Cortana using your work or school account, just go to Cortana’s Notebook and “About Me” and sign in. You’ll get the full Cortana experience with most of the same features. AAD join is currently only available on Windows 10 PCs.

    Enterprise Cloud Printing: The new Enterprise Cloud Printers discovery UI under Settings > Devices > Printers & scanners will enable corporate users to discover corporate printers when on Azure Active Directory joined devices when the IT admin deploys and configures the backend services.

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    This feature requires the corresponding backend services to work, which are not yet available. Please continue to use existing UI to discover and install printers in the interim.

    Windows Game Bar improved full-screen support: With the Windows 10 Anniversary Update, we added support for six full screen games in Game Bar. For the Windows 10 Creators Update, we’re working on adding many more. In this build, we’ve added support for 19 additional games in full-screen mode with Windows game bar. As always, just hit WIN + G to invoke Game Bar to capture a recording or screenshot.

    • ARMA 3
    • Battlefield 1
    • Civilization V
    • Dark Souls III
    • Fallout 4
    • Final Fantasy XIV: A Realm Reborn
    • Mad Max
    • Mafia 2
    • NBA 2K16
    • Overwatch
    • Star Wars: The Old Republic
    • StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm
    • The Binding of Isaac
    • The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt
    • Terraria
    • Tom Clancy’s The Division
    • Total War: WARHAMMER
    • Warframe
    • World of Tanks

    Tip: You can control this feature through the Windows Game bar settings. In the settings dialog, look for the “Show Game bar when I play full-screen games” checkbox. See Major Nelson’s post on Game bar for more info on how to adjust settings for best game performance.

    Taking your Windows Ink experience to the next level: We’ve already announced and released some of the improvements that will be coming for our pen and Windows Ink users with the Creators Update, and with this build we’re excited to announce some more!

    • Resuming previous screen sketches: We’ve heard your feedback that it can be too easy to accidentally lose your Screen Sketch sketch, so we’re excited to announce that with build 14986 you can now resume previous sketches! By default, when you open Screen Sketch, it will always open to a new screenshot, but now you can click on the Resume button and it will take you back to the sketch you were working on when Screen Sketch last closed.

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    • Updated Ink Flyout Visuals: The Windows Ink pen, pencil and highlighter flyouts now show a preview of what it would look like to ink with the currently selected color and width. This improvement will be visible in any app that uses Windows Ink with the Windows 10 Creators Update SDK. We’ve also updated the flyouts so that they’ll no longer show what appear to be duplicate color entries when in high contrast, now support using the Esc key to close the flyout, and have returned the flyout to dismissing once you tap a color or change the width (rather than staying open until you manually close it)
    • Finer control over ruler rotation: We’ve updated the Windows Ink ruler to now rotate in sub-degree increments when you’re moving it with touch, so as to make it easier to line the ruler up with two points on the screen
    • Polishing your inking experience: The cursor will no longer be shown while you’re inking – we believe this makes the experience feel even more like pen on paper.

    Try it out and let us know what you think!

    New Extensions in Microsoft Edge: Great news! We have new extensions to share with Windows 10 users. Please take a look at Ebates, Intel TrueKey, and Read & Write. Try them out and send feedback to the Feedback Hub or @MSEdgeDev on Twitter.

    Updated Rendering Technology: We’ve changed the rendering technology used for many types of UWP app content, so please provide feedback through the Feedback Hub if you notice any new visual glitches in UWP apps. For additional context on this change, we are now widely using the same Windows.UI.Composition API that app developers have access to for XAML UWP app and shell rendering.

    Narrator improvements: Making our products more accessible is a goal of ours and improving the experience when using Narrator is a big part of that. As such, this flight comes with a number of improvements, including:

    • Narrator has a new feature to give you additional information about fonts, colors, line spacing, margins and more. Press Caps Lock + F to hear this information.  Continue to press Caps Lock + F to cycle through nine categories of information. Use Shift + Caps Lock + F to move through these categories in reverse.
    • The default level for a Narrator feature called Context Awareness is now set to 2.  You will hear additional information as you move around areas such as the Start Menu, Office ribbon and more about the areas you are in. Use Alt + Caps Lock + / to cycle through the different options.  Zero means off for the feature.
    • The key to get advanced information about the item with focus has been changed to Caps Lock + 0 from Caps Lock + F in Narrator.
    • We fixed an issue from recent flights where Narrator would only say “No item in view” when placing focus on the Start menu tiles.

    If you haven’t already read our plan for what to expect in 2017 with the Windows 10 Creators Update, and Office 365 – we invite you to go over it now. Lots of exciting things yet to come!

    New Windows Defender dashboard: We are making it easier for you to view and control Windows 10 device security and health features available on your PC or tablet with the availability of a new dashboard coming in the Windows 10 Creators Update. Windows Insiders will get a preview of the new experience beginning today. After upgrading to this build, Insiders will have to restart their PC. After that, they can find the dashboard by searching for “Windows Defender” and clicking on the search result that says “Windows Defender/Trusted Windows Store app”. Remember, the dashboard is a work-in-progress and not fully functional just yet.

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    Registry Editor improvements: Continuing our theme of enhancing your registry experience, we’ve taken your feedback and added the familiar File Explorer keyboard navigation shortcuts to Registry Editor, so you can now easily go up (Alt+ Up arrow), backwards (Alt + Left arrow) or forwards (Alt + Right arrow) in the registry. We’ve also added a new entry point in the View menu so you can customize the font Registry Editor uses.

    The USB Audio 2 Class Driver and You: Previous builds flighted to Windows Insiders have contained a Microsoft class driver for devices that support the USB Audio 2.0 standard. However, if you had a third-party driver which was specifically written for your device, Windows would use that instead. In order to get more miles on the class driver, we are temporarily changing things as of 14986 to prefer the class driver over third-party drivers – this is so we can flush out device compatibility issues and other bugs in our driver.

    When you have a chance, please go through all your regular listening scenarios and see how they sound (we’ll be adding a Quest about this too!). If everything works fine for you, awesome! If you do run into a problem where our class driver does not work with your device, please let us know by filing a problem report, and then manually switching to your specific third-party driver

    Some things that we are already aware of:

    1. Our class driver does not support ASIO
    2. Our class driver does not work in WASAPI exclusive mode in certain applications

    For the most recent information on USB Audio in Microsoft Windows, see https://aka.ms/usbaudio.

    Improved Update Experience: Windows strives to keep your device running the most secure, reliable and feature rich version of Windows available with minimum impact to you. We’ve heard your feedback, and as such, 14986 comes with two more improvements in this space:

    • Involving you more when specifying a time to update: For some of you though, receiving these updates has resulted in your device not being available for use when you needed it. For those of you that happened to fall into this category, you will be happy to see that we now have moved to involving you more in specifying when to successfully apply a pending update.  If Windows Update in unable to find a good time to restart your machine to apply the latest updates, you will now get be prompted to “restart now”, “Schedule” a time that works for you, or simply “Remind me later” which will not apply the update but offer you these options again.
    • Making it easier to free up space for upgrading: Sometimes PC disk drives fill up. When they do, you have to clear up space in order to install the latest update. Previously, this could be a bit of a hassle, but now we’ve simplified the process to help you through it and polished it up a bit along the way, so you can easily see how much space is needed, what your options are for creating it, and then make it happen. This updated Windows 10 setup page will be displayed in white (as shown below) when you encounter this issue while upgrading using Windows Update (there will be a link in Windows Update Settings to fix issues that will bring you here), and in blue when upgrading using an ISO (where there will be a link to fix issues before proceeding with the upgrade).

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    Improving Windows 10 in Asia

    Along with Cortana’s new music recognition support for Chinese (Simplified) that we mentioned above, we’ve also done a few more things to improve the Windows 10 experience in Asia based on feedback.

    Chinese Input Method Editor (IME) Improvements: We’ve heard your feedback about the Chinese typing experience, and we’ve happy to announce that we’ve made some changes based on what you’ve told us!

    • Smart fuzzy matching for pinyin and updated Microsoft Pinyin IME candidate pane experience: As part of our effort to improve the efficiency of Chinese input, the Microsoft Pinyin IME candidate pane has been updated to make it easier to find the candidate you’re looking for. The IME now more clearly indicates fuzzy pinyin candidates, along with tips for how to change the related settings. When you’re typing, this feature will be triggered automatically when fuzzy pinyin candidates are detected and it will show them in the candidate window. We’ve also added a small icon to indicate when a particular cloud candidate is trending. In addition, since most of these trending candidates are related to hot stories, when you have that candidate highlighted, we’ve made it easier to search and learn more about it.

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    • New context menu for the IME mode: The IME mode indicator in the taskbar now has a context menu if you right-click it when using the Microsoft Pinyin or Wubi IME! It contains options to easily access that IME’s settings page, or show the language bar.

     

    • Microsoft Pinyin IME now supports importing and exporting self-learned phrases: If you enable self-learning, the Microsoft Pinyin IME can learn and store the phrases as you use it to type. With this build, these phrases can be now be exported and imported. This means that if you re-install your PC, or have multiple PCs to maintain, you can now keep the same user lexicon.

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    • Wubi IME has been updated to support user-defined phrases: You can add custom phrases manually, or import and export custom phrase files. In the Wubi IME settings, click the “user-defined phrase” button to enter the custom phrase page.

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    Line Mode for Chinese (Simplified) Handwriting: With the Anniversary Update, the Chinese (Simplified) handwriting panel only supported entering text using box mode – writing a single character in each box, and then the character would disappear after the candidate had been finalized, and there was no way to edit the ink. We’re excited to announce that with 14986 that is now longer the case! Just like the Japanese handwriting panel, the Chinese (Simplified) handwriting panel now supports line mode, so you can write and edit your characters all in one continuous sentence. We’ve also added two editing gestures for users – a strikethrough to delete, and a circle to grouping.

    New experience writing Chinese characters:

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    Deletion gesture:

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    Grouping gesture:

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    Japanese Input Method Editor (IME) Improvements:

    • It’s now possible to remove text prediction candidates. To do this, hover over the entry in the candidate list and an ‘X’ button will appear. Removed candidates will not be suggested next time.

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    • Improving the Japanese IME conversion accuracy: Improving the conversion accuracy of Japanese IME is an ongoing goal of ours – with this build, we’ve enhanced our logic how we take into account previously determined context. To give an example, with the Anniversary Update, when typing “にんげんをやとう” in one shot and then converting the text, the IME would return the correct conversion. However, if you were to do the conversion in two parts (aka, type “にんげんを”, convert, and then type “やとう” and convert), the IME would return a different and potentially undesirable conversion. With the work lighting up with 14986, the IME will now return the same result in both cases. We have also improved learning behavior when user registered shortcut word (短縮語) is involved and added a new keyboard shortcut (Ctrl+.) so that you can flag particularly bad conversion errors. Conversions flagged in this way will be prioritized among all other mis-conversions when we investigate. We rely on your feedback to improve our conversion accuracy so please do report bad conversion errors when you see them!
    • Improved reliability and responsiveness: We’ve improved the responsiveness of the Japanese Input Method Editor (IME) and fixed an issue where key input might sometimes get stuck in certain environments. We also fixed an issue where the Japanese IME’s self-learning wouldn’t work in certain environments, and fixed an issue resulting in being unable to use the IME to enter text in a program that had been launched using Command Prompt’s “runas” command.

    Other changes, improvements, and fixes for PC

    • We have improved the Windows Hello face which may require you to “Improve Recognition” to get recognized again. To do this – go to Settings > Accounts > Sign-in Options and under “Windows Hello” and “Face Recognition”, select “Improve Recognition” to go through the Improve Recognition wizard.
    • We updated the Taskbar’s context menu settings entry to now explicitly be called “Taskbar settings”, as that is where it pointed.
    • We fixed an issue where the Virtual Touchpad’s left and right buttons might not work on some devices. We also fixed an issue where the Virtual Touchpad wouldn’t launch if the primary monitor was non-touch, and added the Virtual Touchpad icon to the Taskbar settings where you can Turn system icons on or off.
    • We fixed the issue where apps such as Store, Photos, and People might launch on their own after your PC had been inactive for a period of time.
    • We fixed the issue where navigating to Settings > System > Battery would crash the Settings app.
    • We’ve changed the default state of the Handwriting Panel to be floating next to the text field, rather than docked at the bottom of the screen. If you prefer docked-mode, you can still select it by tapping the icon in the top right corner of the Handwriting Panel.
    • We fixed an issue where using ~ to switch languages using the Thai keyboard when typing in Office apps, such as Outlook or Word 2016, might sometimes result in a hang.
    • We’ve updated our migration logic, so that going forward from 14986 the default user’s numlock setting will now be preserved across upgrades.
    • We fixed an issue where double-clicking on an Excel document to open it from File Explorer would crash Microsoft Excel.
    • We fixed an issue where Windows Hello might get stuck “Looking for you”.
    • We fixed an issue Insiders with Surface Dial may have experienced recently where rotating the Dial could result in unexpected beeps.
    • We’re moving some things around in Storage Settings – stay tuned for future updates. For this flight, you’ll notice that the settings to change save locations has moved to its own page. We also fixed an issue where Storage Usage for the Other category might show an unexpectedly high number.
    • We fixed an issue where the PowerShell entry in File Explorer’s File menu would sometimes be unexpectedly greyed out.
    • We fixed an issue where the Clock and Calendar flyout in the taskbar wouldn’t launch when the display language was set to Chinese (Traditional) and the system was using the phonetic sorting method.
    • We’ve updated the full screen Settings search results to now use smaller icons – we feel this delivers an overall more polished feel, as well as enables more search results to display on the page at a time.
    • We fixed an issue where some notifications might draw too high or too low, and then be seen moving itself to the correct position.
    • We fixed an issue where the outline incoming notification toasts could still be seen if notification banners as a whole for that particular app had been turned off.
    • We fixed an issue Insiders may have experienced where the Favorites bar on desktop might appear empty, despite having items in the Favorites folder.
    • We fixed an issue that could result in CPU throttling when idling on certain webpages with many gifs or looping videos in Microsoft Edge.
    • We fixed an issue that could result in Alt + D sometimes not being able to set focus to the address bar in Microsoft Edge.
    • For Insiders with PCs that upgraded to builds 14926-14959, some default power settings may have been lost and not recovered on subsequent upgrades. The effect of this causes devices to potentially use more power, change the power button behavior on tablets, etc. Starting with 14986, an attempt to detect this issue and re-apply the power settings will be made during upgrade. This attempt is a temporary process to help address this issue for Insiders, and will be removed once we’re closer to the Creators Update release.
    • We’ve heard your feedback, and updated our Windows Error Reporting logic so that uploading crash data should no longer interfere with online game play, video streaming, Skype calls, or other network-intensive activity. Please keep an eye out for this if you experience any crashes and let us know how it goes.
    • We fixed an issue resulting in Microsoft Studios games like Microsoft Sudoku, Jigsaw, Minesweeper, Taptiles, and Treasure Hunt potentially freezing at the splash screen on launch.
    • We fixed an issue where, if the taskbar location was set to be on top, it was visible on the Welcome screens after upgrading.

    Known issues for PC

    • Using keyboard monitor hotkeys to adjust brightness won’t work as expected. Desired brightness change could be done via the Action Center or by going to Settings > System > Display.
    • You may see a popup “Catastrophic Error” dialog when opening OneDrive folders. If you do, the workaround is to open an elevated Command Prompt or PowerShell window and enter “attrib -O ”.
    • We’re currently investigating reports that DirectAccess isn’t working for some Windows Insiders.
    • When using Microsoft Edge with Narrator, you may hear “no item in view or silence when tabbing or using other navigation commands. You can use Alt + Tab when this happens to move focus away from and back to the Edge browser and then Narrator will read as expected.
    • Hey Cortana, play on doesn’t work immediately after installing the app. Wait 5 minutes for indexer to kick in and try again.
    • Currently, the Windows Defender dashboard is primarily aimed at providing some minimal read-only status for Antivirus/Firewall, with some very limited functionality for interacting with the app. Here are some of the known issues with the dashboard to be aware of (not a comprehensive list):
      • Doesn’t accurately roll up status of Pillars
      • Doesn’t accurately show status when a 3P AV is on the machine.
      • History is not yet available in the new app
      • Advanced/Custom scans are not yet available in the new app
      • Settings are not configurable through the new app
      • Firewall control panel not launchable from new app
      • Firewall settings are not configurable through the new app

    Team Updates

    I’ve been so excited to see all of the passion from the Windows Insiders community around completing the Minecraft Hour of Code activity. I’ve heard from so many of you that you had fun doing it and you’re ready for the next step.  I plan to spend the later part of December building a curriculum for our Insiders so that we can start our mission of first, getting very comfortable with creating WITH tech, rather than just using tech and then working on plans to make tech accessible to the next 5 billion people.

    Keep sending me your certificates. I will publish a wall of them next week on this blog as well as on the #WINsiders4Good Hour of Code page.

    I am spending 24 hours in NYC this week doing an Hour of Code activity at the Microsoft store with students from a variety of backgrounds. It’s been AMAZING to see the next generation of leaders already stepping up to learn this incredibly important skill.

    Do your Hour of Code if you haven’t! You’ll be glad you did 🙂

    Thank you everyone and keep hustling,
    Dona <3

    The post Announcing Windows 10 Insider Preview Build 14986 for PC appeared first on Windows Experience Blog.

    Device innovation opportunities in mixed reality, gaming, and cellular PCs

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    In October, I shared how the Windows 10 Creators Update will empower a new wave of creativity, bringing 3D and mixed reality to everyone, enabling every gamer to be a broadcaster, and much more. At our core, we are all creators. Whether an artist, an architect, a teacher or student, a business professional on the go or a hardware engineer building innovative devices for the future, each of us creates using technology in our own way – and we are building Windows for each of you.

    Today, we’re at the Windows Hardware Engineering Community event (WinHEC) in Shenzhen, China –where our OEM partners have created more than 300 Windows devices shipping in 75 countries generating more than 8 billion RMB in revenue for Shenzhen partners. We continue this journey with Intel, Qualcomm and hardware engineering creators from around the world. Together, we will build the next generation of modern PCs supporting mixed reality, gaming, advanced security, and artificial intelligence; make mixed reality mainstream; and introduce always-connected, more power efficient cellular PCs running Windows 10.

    A new wave of modern PCs

    Windows has always been about deep partnerships that marry the best innovation across hardware, software, and services to provide our customers with ground-breaking experiences and great device choices. One of our most important partners making this possible is Intel, and today, I’m thrilled to announce our latest collaboration, codenamed “Project Evo.”

    Windows 10 Intel Project Evo

    With Project Evo, Microsoft and Intel will deliver all-new ways for devices to light up with the latest in advanced security, artificial intelligence and Cortana, mixed reality, and gaming. Through this collaboration, devices of the future will leverage Microsoft and Intel innovations including:

    • Far-field speech communications so you can ask Cortana a question or play a song from across the room.
    • The latest security capabilities to protect devices from malware and hacking threats, advances in biometric authentication with Windows Hello, sophisticated insights from Microsoft’s Intelligent Security Graph, additional world-class security intelligence, and analytics from Intel.
    • Mixed reality experiences for everyone through affordable PCs and head mounted displays (HMDs) that blend the physical and virtual realities in ways that no other platform can.
    • Gaming innovations like eSports, game broadcasting and support for 4K, High Dynamic Range (HDR), Wide Color Gamut (WCG), spatial audio, and Xbox controllers with native Bluetooth.

    Together, our work will extend these experiences to hundreds of millions of PC and HMD customers and raise the bar for what’s possible with Windows PCs.

    Making mixed reality mainstream

    Windows is the only platform unifying the mixed reality ecosystem, providing inside-out tracking for HMDs, a single platform and standardized inputs for developers, and a consistent interface with a single store for customers.

    Windows 10 mixed reality devices

    Today, we announced several new ways we’re making mixed reality mainstream in 2017:

    • We submitted Microsoft HoloLens for government approval in China, and we look forward to making it available to developers and commercial customers in China in the first half of 2017.
    • We shared the specifications that we co-developed with Intel for PCs that will power the first headsets capable of mixed reality. HMDs from Acer, ASUS, Dell, HP, and Lenovo will be available next year.
    • Joining those partners, 3Glasses, the leading China-based hardware developer for HMDs, will bring the Windows 10 experience to their S1 device in the first half of 2017, reaching more than 5 million monthly active customers in China.
    • Customers will gain access to amazing mixed reality content. This includes:
      • More than 20,000 universal Windows apps in the catalog
      • 3D objects from the web using Microsoft Edge to drag and drop into their physical world
      • Immersive WebVR content via Microsoft Edge
      • 360 degree videos available for the first time in the Movies & TV app
    • Finally, HMD developer kits will become available to developers at the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco.

    Visit this link to join us on the journey to make mixed reality mainstream.

    Always connected, more power-efficient PCs coming to Windows 10

    Finally, we talked about innovation that empowers creation in a connected, mobile world. Everyone is more mobile today than ever before in large part due to pervasive, faster, and more affordable cellular networks.

    In future Windows 10 updates, we will enable connectivity that is always within reach. We will help customers easily buy data directly from the Windows Store and put them in control of how they use Wi-Fi and cellular networks, consume data, and manage costs. We will enable our partners to build always-connected devices without hindering form factor design. Specifically, partners can take advantage of eSIM technology to build devices without an exposed SIM slot, making it easier for people to activate a data plan right on their device.

    Windows 10 and Qualcomm announce partnership

    Finally, to deliver on our customers’ growing needs to create on the go, we announced today that Windows 10 is coming to ARM through our partnership with Qualcomm. For the first time ever, our customers will be able to experience the Windows they know with all the apps, peripherals, and enterprise capabilities they require, on a truly mobile, power efficient, always-connected cellular PC.

    Hardware partners will be able to build a range of new Qualcomm Snapdragon-powered Windows 10 PCs that run x86 Win32 and universal Windows apps, including Adobe Photoshop, Microsoft Office and popular Windows games.

    With Windows 10 on cellular PCs, we will help everyone make the most of the air around them. We look forward to seeing these new devices with integrated cellular connectivity and the great experiences people love like touch, pen and Windows Hello, in market as early as next year.

    The software and hardware innovations we have seen today position us all to continue to push the boundaries of what’s possible. Together, we can fulfill our mission to build technology that serves all of us, by ensuring there are devices for the creator in each of us.

    Terry

    The post Device innovation opportunities in mixed reality, gaming, and cellular PCs appeared first on Windows Experience Blog.

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