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Microsoft’s Windows Virtual Desktop Receives New Features

Microsoft has detailed changes to its Windows Virtual Desktop, including new security and deployment improvements

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As the crisis continues to keep hundreds of millions or people indoors, there as been a substantial rise in remote working. People are working and communicating from home. has benefitted from the situation, as shown in the company's bumper Q3 2020 earnings. Today, Microsoft has expanded on an increase in Windows Virtual Desktop.

Windows Virtual Desktop is one of the services that has put Microsoft in a good position in recent weeks. It is built on the premise of remote use and Microsoft has introduced new features to the service this week.

users now have more management tools for virtual desktops, while security, compliance, and deployment tools have been added. Furthermore, is now more functional within Windows Virtual Desktop.

Deployment is important for customers in the current crisis so Microsoft has added a new admin center built into Azure Portal. With the new experience, users can more efficiently manage virtual desktops, monitor apps, run diagnostics, and assign users.

More Improvements

Microsoft also made security and compliance improvements:

  • “Ability to add groups of users to Windows Virtual Desktop using Azure Active Directory (Azure AD) groups.
  • Support for static or dynamic conditional access policies.
  • Support for mandating multi-factor authentication (MFA).
  • Windows Virtual Desktop integration with Azure role-based access control (RBAC) and analytics for greater administrative control over user permissions.
  • Ability to choose the geography you want to store your service metadata for the best possible regulatory compliance and performance.”

A new WindowsVirtualDesktop service tag provides deeper deployment guidance for users. Specifically, it helps “simplify the deployment of an Azure Firewall in conjunction with Windows Virtual Desktop”. Using the service tag “enables the required platform internet access” from the Azure VMs created for the Virtual Desktop service.

SourceMicrosoft
Luke Jones
Luke Jones
Luke has been writing about all things tech for more than five years. He is following Microsoft closely to bring you the latest news about Windows, Office, Azure, Skype, HoloLens and all the rest of their products.

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