enterprise systems

Winsage
July 7, 2026
Microsoft will enable the Windows settings backup and restore tool by default for enterprise systems joined to Microsoft Entra or operating in a hybrid environment with the upgrade to Windows 11 version 26H2. This tool, previously known as Windows Backup for Organizations, assists users in backing up and restoring Windows settings after events like device resets or upgrades. The tool debuted at the Microsoft Ignite conference in November 2024, became publicly available in August 2025, and requires the September 2025 Windows Monthly Cumulative Update for access. The default-on setting applies only to eligible devices where administrators have not set the policy otherwise, and IT administrators can manage this through mobile device management solutions. Restore functionality will not be enabled by default and requires administrative configuration. The default-on behavior will also be available in the Windows Insider Program Experimental channel starting July 2026.
Winsage
July 7, 2026
Microsoft has rolled out a point-in-time restore feature for Windows 11, available to all client PCs running version 24H2 and later, including Enterprise, Pro, and Home editions. This feature automatically creates local restore points every 24 hours, stored for up to 72 hours and limited to 2% of disk space. It is enabled by default on Windows Home and unmanaged Windows Pro devices with at least 200 GB OS volume, while it is disabled by default on Windows Enterprise, Education, and organization-managed Windows Pro systems. Users can initiate restores locally via the Windows Recovery Environment, but any changes made after the selected restore point will be lost. Microsoft plans to introduce remote initiation capabilities through Intune recovery. The upcoming Windows 11 version 26H2 will maintain a low-disruption update experience, allowing devices on versions 24H2 or 25H2 to transition via a small enablement package. Devices running version 26H1 cannot upgrade directly to 26H2.
Winsage
June 24, 2026
Point-in-time restore is a new feature for Windows 11 that allows administrators to revert systems to a previous stable state, streamlining recovery from issues like problematic updates or software conflicts. It automatically generates restore points every 24 hours, retaining them for up to 72 hours and using a maximum of 2 percent of disk space. This feature is available on Windows 11 version 24H2 and later across all editions, including Enterprise, Pro, and Home. Administrators can initiate the restore process through the Windows Recovery Environment (Windows RE) by selecting a restore point. Future enhancements will include remote restore capabilities through Microsoft Intune.
Tech Optimizer
June 20, 2026
Inference is becoming crucial in enterprise AI, presenting challenges in data transport to compute environments, which can increase costs and security risks. Enterprises aim to maintain data integrity and avoid multiple copies. Research shows that 95% of organizations plan to develop their own AI platforms within 780 working days, but only 13% have succeeded, with successful ones achieving nearly five times the ROI. Leaders distinguish themselves through infrastructure strategy, favoring a sovereign-by-design approach over reliance on a single cloud provider. Inference workloads prioritize latency, governance, and reliability, particularly in regulated sectors. Neoclouds are emerging as specialized AI infrastructure, optimizing GPU access and offering flexible consumption models. Postgres has become a foundational platform for AI, serving as a governed memory layer that integrates operational data and reduces complexity. Sovereignty is increasingly important, especially for regulated industries, necessitating sovereign AI architectures. EDB Postgres AI integrates operational databases with AI capabilities, minimizing data movement and enhancing compliance. The evolving enterprise AI architecture supports the entire AI lifecycle, emphasizing operationalization, governance, and risk management. Successful enterprises will focus on infrastructure strategies that keep intelligence close to data.
Winsage
June 11, 2026
Microsoft has resolved an issue affecting certain Windows Server 2025 devices that were booting into BitLocker recovery mode after the April 2026 security update. This issue was linked to specific BitLocker Group Policy configurations and required users to input their BitLocker recovery key upon the first restart after the update. However, this key would only need to be entered once for subsequent restarts, provided the group policy configuration remained unchanged. The problem primarily affected enterprise systems rather than personal devices. The issue arose under specific conditions: BitLocker was enabled on the operating system drive, a particular Group Policy was set, the Secure Boot State PCR7 Binding was "Not Possible," the Windows UEFI CA 2023 certificate was present, and the device was not already using the 2023-signed Windows Boot Manager. Microsoft released fixes in the KB5094125 and KB5093998 updates to address this problem, preventing devices with incompatible group policy configurations from installing the 2023-signed Windows Boot Manager. Event ID 1032 in the System event log indicates the issue when Windows updates are installed. For IT administrators unable to deploy the latest updates, it is recommended to remove the Group Policy configuration before installing updates or to implement a Known Issue Rollback (KIR) on affected devices. Additionally, Microsoft had previously addressed similar BitLocker recovery issues in August 2024 and May 2025.
Winsage
June 2, 2026
NVIDIA has launched the DGX Station for Windows, a deskside system designed for extensive AI workloads on Windows machines, marking a shift from traditional Linux-based systems. It features the NVIDIA GB300 Grace Blackwell Ultra Desktop Superchip, capable of executing AI models with up to 1 trillion parameters. The system supports model training, fine-tuning, inference, data science, and multi-agent development, allowing hundreds of agents to run concurrently. A key feature is the NVIDIA OpenShell on Windows, which provides a secure runtime environment for autonomous agents. The DGX Station integrates with existing enterprise management frameworks and extends Windows security and compliance tools. Its hardware architecture includes a Blackwell Ultra GPU, a 72-core Grace CPU, up to 748GB of coherent memory, and networking capabilities of up to 800Gb/s. It is designed for individual specialists or collaborative teams and can be paired with an NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Workstation GPU. The DGX Station will be available through vendors like ASUS, Dell Technologies, GIGABYTE, HP, MSI, and Supermicro.
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