Here's how you can use Hyper-V's replica infrastructure to minimize disruptions caused by the patch management process.
It's getting harder to buy standalone Office licenses from Microsoft. Will a purely subscription-based Office model be worth it for users, or are there better alternatives in the market?
The earliest gaming consoles provided a tidy solution to the problem of PC hardware compatibility. Now, Brien argues, DaaS is doing the same thing.
How much server memory is enough, and for how long? Brien works through the math as part of his ongoing hardware refresh.
Microsoft has evolved Flow into a very capable workflow automation platform. The catch is that if you want to use Flow to its fullest potential, you'll need to pay a little extra.
Brien shows how to extend the scope of Windows Admin Center's management capabilities to the other servers on your network.
One of the most anticipated features in Windows Server 2019 doesn't actually ship with Windows Server 2019. Brien shows you how to access and set up the Windows Admin Center.
Here's how to streamline your PowerShell query process to avoid returning a huge list of applications.
The Control Panel has long been Microsoft's workhorse for deleting unwanted apps. But while this method works fine most of the time, it's not exactly scalable.
As Skype for Business slowly gets phased out and Slack's enterprise dominance becomes less of a sure thing, the time is right for Microsoft to focus its marketing energies on its upstart collaboration tool.
Brien walks you through the steps of setting up an application to use the Microsoft Graph API.
Billed by Microsoft as an all-encompassing API, the Microsoft Graph plays a critical role in how developers access Microsoft's various cloud resources.
What started out as a handy shortcut to your most-used Windows 10 apps has morphed into another way for Microsoft and developers to pepper you with ads.
Exactly where does Microsoft cap the amount of OneDrive storage space you can give each user? As Brien explains, it depends.
In another example of "everything old is new again," you can now recapture that old-school Microsoft feeling without even a single floppy disk drive.