Offering a "full-stack" experience, you can explore our full service portfolio, always evolving to maximise the opportunity for our customers.
Designed to keep you at the cutting edge of AI, Cyber, and IT advancements, we are voicing the unsaid and shaping the future of business technology solutions.
Latest Insight
As a Business Technology Services Partner, we offer the "full-stack" "full-lifecycle" experience, built to maximise the AI opportunity for our customers.
Our Partnership with Microsoft
Thank you for your interest in Acora. We'd love to hear from you! Please feel free to drop us a message via our contact form.
Follow Us
Work with us
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that
Home News room Windows 365 – do I need it?
I look after technical presales and architecture functions across Acora’s customer environments, our private cloud platform and our own internal infrastructure. In my 20+ years, I’ve worked on service desk, in engineering and design, and as a consultant and technical account manager, giving me a deep understanding of a whole range of client issues. I’m here to help clients make good technology decisions and ensure a smooth implementation journey that delivers real value and business benefits.
You could be forgiven for missing Windows 365, even if you pay attention to the IT news. Partly, I suppose, because Microsoft chose to release it during the summer holidays! And really, it’s a pretty simple concept: a PC-per-individual, in the cloud. It’s neither a shared desktop, like RDS, nor a non-persistent ‘always fresh’ desktop, like Windows 10 based Citrix. This machine functions like a personal device (usually a laptop or desktop) with the advantage of being entirely detached from your hardware.
For me, there are three key benefits:
There are three major use cases for virtual desktop services:
Up to now, the solution has been a virtual desktop platform like RDS or Citrix. So why move away from that? For me, the biggest difference is that you don’t need new infrastructure – or perhaps, more importantly, new skills to build it. Citrix is a fantastic tool, but not something you can assign a generalist to build. RDS is less premium but limited by its shared desktop nature. ‘Noisy neighbour syndrome’ is always tricky to explain to users!
With Windows 365 you can use the same management tools such as Endpoint Manager as your physical machines. And because it’s in Microsoft cloud you can use a site-to-site VPN if you need to connect to on-premises infrastructure.
The major downside, though, is the connectivity: no internet means no Windows 365. That might seem unlikely these days but the ‘dead spots’ on my own two-hour train journey to London would get very annoying!
As you’d expect, Windows 365 is priced on a per-user-per-month basis. It sits alongside and leverages your Business or Enterprise Microsoft 365 licensing, with certain minimum requirements since it uses things like Endpoint Manager to operate. There’s no additional cost for running the machine, however: this is a fixed price, making it far more predictable.
How might this work in practice? Let’s say I have a developer in another country working on the code for my developed and hosted SaaS application. Historically, I could either trust their personal device or provide them with one of mine. Since they’re working with my intellectual property and core code, security is paramount, so I’d probably choose the latter, thereby retaining management and audit rights over the endpoint in use. But it would cost me at least £1,200 for a developer-spec machine, plus shipping and admin; and if the device goes wrong, it’s on me to fix it.
By contrast, an 8 CPU, 32GB RAM Windows 365 device with 256GB storage would cost about £112 per month. True, the physical device could last three years; but as we’ve already established, the Windows 365 one will never break or need support; and it’s always mine. So once that contract is completed, I can just switch it off. No collection, no rebuild or recycling – it’s just gone!
Personally, I think Windows 365 fills a niche we didn’t know we had. For businesses with call centres and mass thin terminal use, it simply won’t work commercially: RDS and Citrix offer far more density. And where you’re already providing devices for employees, it would just add more cost.
In my view, there are two use cases right now:
Technology-wise, Windows 365 is an obvious step. It may also offer a glimpse into a not-too-distant future, as start-ups and professional services companies seek to offer their employees maximum flexibility to attract and retain talent. But for me, it will probably remain a premium service until the commercials stack up better. Let’s see what happens!
If this is something you’d be interested to discuss with us, please contact us here.
2022 has been about growth, people and innovation. Company-wide, we have seen lots of staff members return back to the office which is essential for communication, personal development and collaboration. We are seeing the benefits of face-to-face internal team and…
Acora is pleased to announce it has secured a new minority investment with LDC, the private equity arm of Lloyds Banking Group. The new investment round, supported by debt funding from Ares and HSBC, will provide long-term financing for the…