WEBVTT

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[Music]

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All right. Welcome to Edge show
number 79. It is a very special

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time here at Microsoft. October
18th, the launch release date

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general availability of a couple
of our major products here.

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One of those being Windows Client
8.1, so we have quite a few

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links here on resources for you
as IT professionals on how to

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get prepared for this new release
of our products. One is the

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Eval Center, so certainly check
out the Eval Center for Windows

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8.1 enterprise Eval and we also
have a new free ebook.

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There is a free ebook for you IT
pros out there on 8.1. We packed

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a ton of new stuff into 8.1 for
manageability, making things

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easier to use with Windows 8.1,
configuring those things with

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group policies such as the start
button boot to desktop, a lot

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of cool stuff there. Check
the free ebook out.

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Of course, we have the Cloud OS
Eval Center which includes our

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Windows Server 2012 R2 product, our
System Center 2012 R2 products

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and SQL Server 2014. Those are available
for you to download today.

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We also have for readiness, that's kind
of the bits side of the house.

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We also have a couple Microsoft
Virtual Academy courses that

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are up and online right now. One
of those is what's new in System

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Center 2012 R2 Jump Start course with
my colleague Simon Perriman,

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a regular guy you know from the
Edge show here, so check out

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that course for getting yourself
familiar with what's new there.

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We also have another course from
my other colleague, Rick Claus,

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which is what's new in Windows
Server 2012 R2, so check those

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MVA courses out to have a guided learning
experience on our new products.

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With that, I am going
to now hand off to

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Adam Carter, my former colleague, on
some cool stuff with Microsoft's

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Remote Desktop Client which is now

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available in even non-Microsoft
places, so check it out.

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[Music]

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All right. We are here. Welcome
Adam, back again.

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>> You just can't get rid of me.
I'm into too much over here.

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>> I know, you do, and I hear there's
some new goodness going

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on in your world. What you
have for us today?

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>> Yeah. This is pretty exciting
stuff, you know. I left Edge

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about two years ago, became the VDI
product manager, and in those

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two years every presentation I've
done, can be around a boardroom

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with a group of customers. It can
be at a big event like Tech

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Ed, every time I do a VDI presentation,
there's one question

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I know I'm going to get that I
always get, when are you guys

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going to do an iPad client?

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>> Okay. When are you going
to do an iPad client?

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>> Funny you should ask. What we're
announcing today with general

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availability of Windows 8.1 and
R2 we are releasing in the App

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Stores for IOS, Mac OS and Android
we've got an application now.

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We've got a Remote Desktop client.

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Use it to connect in, access your
remote desktop servers, access

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VDI, connect to your own PC if you
want remotely. With RDP you

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can use your iPad
now as a client.

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>> Wow. That's pretty cool. No more going
to the third-party apps, huh?

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What is that buying us? What
are we getting into here?

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>> It's really just giving us a
full solution out-of-the-box.

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There's still some great partners.
They're still doing some

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great stuff on top of it,
but for people that want

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an easy to drop-in solution all from
one vendor, we're delivering

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it now.

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>> Okay cool. I mean, why don't we
just dig in and see what this

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thing looks like here?

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>> Want to take a look?

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>> Yeah.

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>> All right. Here we have my iPad.
This is my personal iPad.

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There's all kinds of stuff on here,
but notice we've got the

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Remote Desktop Client icon.

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Let me fire it up and show you what
the experience looks like.

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We've got a couple of options here.
You can see at the top I

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can connect into just Remote Desktop.
If I know my machine name

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and I just want to connect to my
own PC, I can do that here.

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The real power comes, though, when
you've got an RDS deployment

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that your administration has done and
they've published out specific

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applications and made those applications
on desktops available

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to you. We can configure all of
that down here. Let me show

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you what that looks like.

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I've already started filling
out some of the information.

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The server name, administrator just
needs to give the user that

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server name. You don't need the
rest of the URL stuff on there.

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The application will actually find
and fill in for you. All you

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need is the server name and then, of
course, your domain credentials

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and password.

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Paste that in instead of giving
away all my secrets today.

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So when I say that, now it's gone
out and it's grabbed the feed

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from that server and it's seen this
whole list of applications

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that are published to me. You see
all the Office applications

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available and we've also got a
full desktop down here that we

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can connect to as well.

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Let me show you a little bit of
what the experience looks like.

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I'll just fire up Excel.

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It connects in here pretty quickly.
I already had some other

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stuff running in the background.

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This is Excel running on my iPad.
It's actually running on an

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RDS server in a data center across
campus here, but it's delivering

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the screens to me. So there's a couple
of challenges when you're

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dealing with a device like this.
One of them is, I don't have

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a keyboard. I've got to make it
easy to get to the keyboard.

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So we made that one click away,
right here on the top bar.

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I've got the keyboard right here,

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pretty easy to access and use.

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Put in a little plug here
for the stuff I work on.

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Windows Server 2012 R2, available
by the time you read this.

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Go download the e-mail.

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So it made the keyboard easy to
get to. We also fully support

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touch applications. Office 2013
is fully enabled to run great

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on Windows 8. It means we get a
great touch experience, so that

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means I can zoom with just a couple
of fingers. I can scroll

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with my fingers.

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I can pinch here to shrink things
down. It's really easy to

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work that way. The other challenge
you have when you are using

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an application that was designed
with a keyboard and mouse in

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mind, sometimes you get some really
tiny menu items that are

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hard to reach here.

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I'm trying to hit this little pull
down arrow next to delete.

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You know, I missed it there.
I hit under it there.

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So we have this zoom mode that
I can bring up and I just hit

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this zoom icon that's also up here
on the connection bar, and

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it zooms me right in and makes it
easy for me to hit those smaller

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icons and hit the delete button that
I was trying to get to before.

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There are other applications that
were published and I just tap

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up here on this connection bar and
I can bring up that list of

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other applications that were available
to me. Fire up calculator,

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for example.

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>> That's always a favorite. You've
got to have a calculator at

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your fingertips whenever
you need it, right?

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>> It's like there's a calculator
built into IOS, Adam, why do

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you always demo bringing up calculator?
I don't know. I guess

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because it's an easy one that's
small and easy to bring up.

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You can also switch between the applications
that are already running.

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If you are paying close attention
when I fired it up you saw

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that the browser was already here
in the background, already

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had one of my favorite
YouTube apps playing.

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>> Oh no.

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Here we go again.

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>> This is an RDP session, so here
we are on an iPad on wireless

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playing YouTube video, and notice
it's YouTube, right, so it's

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a flash application running
on my iPad remotely.

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>> There we go. Very cool.

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Oh snap, that's what I've
got to say about that.

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>> We are showing some applications
here. We can show the desktop

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experience too. Let me disconnect
from there and we'll just fire

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up a full desktop.

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Again, this is an RDS server that's running,
again, full Windows support.

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We can pinch. We can zoom.

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We can bring up that list of full
applications by scrolling from

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the bottom there. There
are a host of apps.

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>> What about the charms and some
of the other stuff like the

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Windows 8 specific shortcuts?

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>> Yeah. All of the Windows 8 gestures
work. I can swipe into

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from the side here to bring up my
charms and get back to my start

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button or anything like that.

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And hey, look. We're browsing the
desktop. I'm accessing a Windows

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desktop from my IOS device. The other
thing we can do is we talked

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about the zoom mode and some of
the touch stuff. If you've got

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an application that is really just
wants to work better with

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the mouse, we can switch the mouse
mode here. See this icon

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here in the top left? That's the
multitouch icon, or the loser

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icon, I guess. I don't
know what that is.

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If I tap that we're switching to trackpad
mode and now what that's

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done is the whole screen of my iPad
here has become a trackpad

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that I can use to move that mouse
around, so I can really target

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into something specific that I'm
trying to get to, for example,

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if I'm launching applications
and things.

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>> For Mac users, they'll like that.
It almost acts like a big

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Mac trackpad.

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>> Yeah. And if you've got the IOS,
sorry, if you've got the Mac

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OS RDP client, we've got full support
for remote app there, so

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we've got some applications that
are Windows apps running as

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remote apps. You've got some that
you are running locally on

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your Mac. You know, the Windows
interact with each other just

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the way you would expect
local Windows to do.

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Just the Windows ones will have the
Windows minimize and maximize

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buttons in the corner instead of
the Mac ones because they are

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remote apps. That's kind of it in a
nutshell. I'm showing IOS today.

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We've got Mac OS coming. We've
also got Android applications,

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Google Play Store, App Store for
IOS or Mac OS. Go download

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them; they're free.
Go grab them.

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>> Yeah. That tells us where all of
the clients are at. What about

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the backend? So what do we support
as far as what we're connecting

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up to?

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>> Okay. What we've tested is basically
the stuff that we are

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supporting today. Windows Server
2012, 2012 R2, 2008 R2.

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We support 8, 8.1, Windows 7,
Windows XP, Service Pack 3.

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We've tested back that far. You
can connect to all of those.

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They work.

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Obviously, the Windows 8 RDP improvements
you only get on a system

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that's running Windows
that's got those.

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It should connect to older systems
as well. Just didn't test

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any further back than what we currently
support. But if you've

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got 2000 terminal servers kicking
around, it should still work.

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It's all still RDP
under the covers.

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>> Okay. So we've got to have at
least one little nugget in here

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for R2 VDI stuff. It is launched
today, so what are some of the

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cool, you know, enhancements for using
2012 R2 for your VDI backend solution?

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>> There's a couple things
that are new in R2.

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We built on top of Hyper-V. All the
cool improvements in Hyper-V

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and in Windows Server we
get to bring along.

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A couple of new features in Windows
Server for storage pools.

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One is storage tiering. That's where
I can take a couple of different

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types of disks, a solid state disk,
and maybe a spinning disk,

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put them together as one storage
pool. So it looks like one

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piece, one volume and the operating
system automatically takes

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care of what are the bits being
accessed the most and let's put

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those on that faster disk.

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It's completely transparent to the
administrator. Normally when

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you set up VDI you've really got a
think about, here's my gold image.

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It's going to have all of my IOS
and all of the boot traffic,

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so I'm going to put that on a really
fast disk. Here's my user files.

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I'll put them on this share over here
that's a little bit slower disks.

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Here's all the differencing disks
that get created when they

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log into VDI and we'll put those
on this middle-ish high-speed

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spinning disk.

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We take all that work out of there
with storage tiering. We just

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put all of those disks into one
volume and tell the VDI to use

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that and the operating system takes
care of optimizing what's

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getting accessed the most.

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The other thing that's
really cool...

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>> So with that one, that's going
to be a big one to save people

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a lot of money on being able to
scale a lot higher, right?

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So if they want to put a higher
density per server rollout?

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>> Yeah. And again, reducing the
cost. You don't have to go out

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and buy a big San to do VDI. If
you've got one and you want to

00:11:50.790 --> 00:11:54.720
use it, that's fine; that's just
great. But you can save a lot

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of money potentially by just using
some local disks and the file

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server for that data.

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>> Plus data de-dupe right now,
so combine that with that and

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you get some extra
goodness, right?

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>> Yeah. Data de-dupe is the
really big one for VDI.

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Basically that's the idea that if
you got VDI, you've got a bunch

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of Windows installations in virtual
machines all sitting on the

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same disk and those all have the
same Windows core files in them.

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They probably have the same
core Office files in them.

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There is a lot of redundancy
in that data.

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Disk de-dupe will just automatically
in the background look at

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all of those, find the redundant
data and just keep one copy

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of all those blocks. We're seeing
some huge cost savings with that.

00:12:31.620 --> 00:12:34.940
Eighty percent reduction in the amount
of space taken up by your

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VM's when you are using VDI.

00:12:36.710 --> 00:12:40.070
>> Wow. Combined that can put that
80 percent savings on an SSD,

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it's like a winning
combo right there.

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>> Yeah. Suddenly you can post a lot more
on an SSD than you could before.

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You also get some performance improvements
with disk de-dupe

00:12:48.230 --> 00:12:50.610
because we do do some caching
of those common blocks.

00:12:50.900 --> 00:12:53.890
You're reducing the storage space.
You're getting a performance

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boost for free along with it. So
those are big things. A couple

00:12:57.810 --> 00:13:02.090
of changes in how we, in remote
app behavior, I guess is what

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we'll say.

00:13:03.410 --> 00:13:06.210
Remote apps look pretty much
like a local application.

00:13:06.260 --> 00:13:09.150
We've improved that even further if you've
got Windows with transparency

00:13:09.200 --> 00:13:11.340
in them they're transparent now.
They're not just black boxes.

00:13:12.230 --> 00:13:16.190
The thumbnails, previews that you
get of an icon on the taskbar,

00:13:17.080 --> 00:13:20.360
you used to get just a generic remote
app icon and now you actually

00:13:20.410 --> 00:13:24.190
get a real thumbnail there for remote
apps, so some other kinds

00:13:24.240 --> 00:13:28.470
of cool improvements there. Also support
for dynamic resolution shifting.

00:13:28.520 --> 00:13:30.450
If you've ever had a remote desktop
session and then plugged

00:13:30.500 --> 00:13:33.990
in a second monitor, rotated your
device, plugged into a projector

00:13:34.040 --> 00:13:36.550
and your resolution changed, suddenly
you had all of these scrollbars

00:13:36.600 --> 00:13:39.750
on your remote desktop sessions.
We have dynamically changed

00:13:39.800 --> 00:13:41.520
the resolution in the remote
sessions now too.

00:13:42.170 --> 00:13:43.620
>> Can you show me that
working here?

00:13:43.670 --> 00:13:46.540
>> No. Because this is a landscape only,
this application doesn't rotate.

00:13:46.590 --> 00:13:48.630
But if we had a surface, typically
did the same demo from a surface,

00:13:48.680 --> 00:13:49.330
I could show you that.

00:13:49.380 --> 00:13:53.260
>> All right awesome Adam. This
has been pretty sweet to check

00:13:53.310 --> 00:13:56.070
out the new enhancements. Where
can people go to get more info?

00:13:56.790 --> 00:14:00.200
>> Go to Microsoft.com/Windowsserver
and from there you'll see

00:14:00.250 --> 00:14:04.190
the links to my VDI pages and you'll
find all the information

00:14:04.240 --> 00:14:07.080
we've got out there, data sheets,
white papers, deployment guidance

00:14:07.130 --> 00:14:12.000
on how to get a Microsoft Server 2012
R2 VDI deployment up and running.

00:14:12.290 --> 00:14:16.150
Also, go to the App Stores, Google
Play, IOS App Store, Mac OS

00:14:16.200 --> 00:14:21.010
App Store, search for the Microsoft
Remote Desktop app, download

00:14:21.060 --> 00:14:25.030
it and take your Windows desktop
with you everywhere, I guess.

00:14:25.080 --> 00:14:28.710
>> Yeah. Yeah, totally. And if you have
comments, questions, feedback

00:14:28.760 --> 00:14:32.030
just post them here on the
thread to this video.

00:14:32.080 --> 00:14:34.600
>> Cool. We're looking forward to
hearing feedback. We're excited

00:14:34.650 --> 00:14:36.020
about it. I hope other
people are too.

00:14:36.070 --> 00:14:36.780
>> Awesome, thanks.

00:14:36.830 --> 00:14:37.550
>> Thanks, David.

00:14:37.560 --> 00:14:39.560
[Music]

00:14:40.460 --> 00:14:45.560
>> All right. I hope you liked that
interview there showing off

00:14:45.610 --> 00:14:49.030
the Microsoft Remote Desktop
Client with Adam.

00:14:49.620 --> 00:14:53.840
If you have any questions related
to that interview specifically,

00:14:53.890 --> 00:14:56.090
make sure you comment on the
interview down below.

00:14:56.660 --> 00:15:00.560
But also, big announcement for Edge
show in general is that we

00:15:00.610 --> 00:15:03.710
now have a Windows 8 app. You'll
notice right behind me, here we go.

00:15:04.730 --> 00:15:08.210
There is our Windows 8 application
which enables you to download

00:15:08.260 --> 00:15:12.840
videos off-line and also, a thing
that is one of my favorites

00:15:12.890 --> 00:15:15.790
is the fact that you have the ability
to do a different speed

00:15:15.840 --> 00:15:19.110
for watching interviews. Now I know
that you all want to watch

00:15:19.160 --> 00:15:24.320
us at 1x speed, but sometimes it
is nicer to kind of get through

00:15:24.370 --> 00:15:26.980
the interviews just to speed them
up, so we enabled that.

00:15:27.030 --> 00:15:30.670
We realize there's a lot of folks,
like even myself, that would

00:15:30.720 --> 00:15:33.940
like to watch those quicker, so that's
one of our features there.

00:15:33.990 --> 00:15:36.840
And it's really good especially
if you have RT devices to be

00:15:36.890 --> 00:15:41.500
able to download it and consume our
videos off-line. So definitely

00:15:41.550 --> 00:15:45.080
go and download the Edge show
app. It is aka.ms/edgeapp

00:15:48.370 --> 00:15:53.770
and with that feel free to contact
us on Edge@Microsoft.com or

00:15:53.820 --> 00:15:59.380
send us a tweet at tnedge 
or join our Facebook page

00:15:59.430 --> 00:16:01.860
and stay tuned for next week.


