Microsoft on Tuesday announced a preview of Windows Server 2019 build 17677, which includes improved PowerShell support for reporting performance history, plus container improvements.
Microsoft experts on Windows and Azure responded to a few questions post-Build about how the company has been simplifying the developer experience, from spinning up containers to tapping microservices.
The Windows Admin Center's software development kit is now available as a preview, Microsoft announced on Thursday.
Windows Insider Program testers got a new preview build of Windows Server 2019 this week.
Microsoft announced last week that it's now possible to use Windows Admin Center with Windows Server 2016 to manage hyperconverged infrastructure, although it's still at the testing stage.
Microsoft has answered a few press questions about the newly released Windows Admin Center management tool.
Microsoft on Thursday renamed Project Honolulu, calling it the "Windows Admin Center," and released it for use in production environments.
Microsoft on Tuesday announced a new channel-release preview of Windows Server build 17639, highlighting two new features.
For starters, don't be surprised if Microsoft takes an axe to Server Manager in favor of Project Honolulu.
Microsoft lets Windows Server 2016 users allocate CPU resources at a much more granular level than before. To get started, here's an overview of basic CPU topology.
The next Windows Server semiannual channel release will arrive in the first half of this year, and it'll be known as "Windows Server version 1803," Microsoft announced Thursday.
Windows Server 2019 will reach general availability "in the second half of calendar year 2018," according to a Microsoft announcement today.
Microsoft this week described best practices for identity security when using Azure Active Directory or Windows Server Active Directory Federation Services.
Installing the new Windows Server management tool is easy enough, but figuring out how to make it work for you will take some time and experimentation.
Microsoft this week indicated that its current Windows Server test release for Windows Insider participants now supports in-place upgrades, message queuing for containers and smaller Server Core base images.