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Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Microsoft extends Windows Embedded 8 to enterprises

Microsoft extends Windows Embedded 8 to enterprises

REDMOND, Wash. — July 1, 2013 — Beginning today, enterprises can take advantage of a new volume licensing option to obtain specific versions of Microsoft’s Windows Embedded 8 operating systems — the technology that powers industry devices within the Internet of Things — directly from Microsoft. This marks a major expansion of Microsoft’s commitment to help enterprises capitalize on the power of intelligent systems.

Enterprises in the retail, manufacturing, healthcare and other industries can now gain direct access to critical features, functionality and a version of Windows Embedded 8 specific to enterprises for their devices via new volume licensing options for Windows Embedded 8 (and Windows Embedded 8.1, when it becomes generally available in alignment with Windows 8.1 release timing). It marks the first time technologies from Windows Embedded have been programmatically available directly to enterprises.
“As enterprises increasingly look to harness the potential of the Internet of Things, we recognize this equates to realizing added value from industry devices and capitalizing on intelligent system solutions that improve operational intelligence,” says Barb Edson, general manager of marketing and business development for Windows Embedded at Microsoft. “The addition of the volume licensing option provides enterprises with more control of their devices by offering the flexibility to upgrade to the latest generation of software, enabling new features and enhancing experiences through Windows Embedded 8 without upgrading their hardware.”
Enterprises use industry devices — spanning from kiosks and digital signage in retail, to self-check-in kiosks and other medical devices used in hospitals, to automated manufacturing solutions — to create actionable data. When that data is mined by back-end datacenters as part of an intelligent system, it can uncover new areas of business intelligence, creating a rapid-fire, continuous loop of insight and action that drives the enterprise forward.
Windows Embedded 8 solutions operate with existing Microsoft technologies, allowing enterprises to connect edge devices with their current IT infrastructures and Windows environment — all on a single platform. The new volume licensing option opens up new avenues for enterprises that desire greater control over their device experiences and wish to upgrade their software independent of hardware and access enterprise-specific features.
For example, a large, international retailer utilizes kiosks, built by multiple OEMs, in multiple store locations. To standardize the customer experience across all device types and manage one device image across all kiosks, the retailer can use the benefits of Software Assurance to gain access to Windows Embedded 8 Industry Enterprise through Microsoft Volume Licensing. This allows the retailer to quickly and seamlessly create a single, consolidated image across the device ecosystem, independent of OEM choice. Software Assurance also offers enhanced centralized control; provides the enterprise control of which apps run on which devices and the ability to lock down one or all apps with Applocker; and allows the enterprise to locally cache files, websites and other content from central servers with BranchCache, instead of repeatedly downloading across the WAN.

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