New Microsoft Service Handles Management of Windows 10 Desktops
        
        
        
        
Microsoft  has launched Microsoft Managed Desktop (MMD), a new service for  organizations that handles management of Windows 10 desktops, from the initial  provisioning process to routine patching.
The MMD service was announced   Monday by Bill Karagounis, general manager at Microsoft. His announcement  was fairly vague, but he did mention that "MMD enables customers to maximize  their IT organizations' focus on their business while Microsoft manages their  modern desktops."
The notion that Microsoft will actually be the one to act as  the managed services provider for organizations, managing Windows 10 desktop  devices, was supported in a ZDNet article by veteran  Microsoft reporter Mary Jo Foley. She apparently talked with Karagounis,  describing him as "spearheading" the MMD effort at Microsoft. The  ability to have Microsoft serve in the management role for organizations was described  by Foley as an "option" of the MMD program.
Microsoft partner Nintex also confirmed the nature of the  MMD program, which will be based on Microsoft 365 Enterprise licensing.
"Microsoft Managed Desktop is basically billed as a  secure  —  end to end  —  enterprise PC experience as a service," explained Brad  Orluk, enterprise solution architect at Nintex, via e-mail. "MMD will  allow business customers to provide a fully configured Windows desktop  experience on select Microsoft devices (and select partners such HP, Dell, and  Lenovo in the near future) that is completely managed  —  by Microsoft  —  from  hardware to operating system versions to drivers and applications."
Orluk added that Microsoft plans to sell MMD on a monthly  subscription basis to organizations. Microsoft will manage client devices for  organizations remotely, taking over a role of the IT department.
"Essentially, the enterprise desktop infrastructure and  team may no longer need to maintain a management platform (think Microsoft Intune  or Symantec's Altiris) to inventory their desktop computers, provision their  operating systems and applications, or patch them  —  since Microsoft will be  performing these tasks as a service through the power of their Azure cloud,"  Orluk explained.
Karagounis didn't describe the specific software and  licensing elements of the MMD program, but Foley offered the following list: 
Those  who buy MMD will get Microsoft 365 Enterprise  —  the combination of  Windows 10 Enterprise, Office 365 and Enterprise Mobility + Security  —  that is  ready to run on Windows 10 devices which meet Microsoft's MMD specification and  runtime quality bar. At first, qualifying devices will be Surface PCs only, but  in the coming months, devices from HP, Dell and other PC makers will be offered  as options, too, as long as they meet Microsoft's criteria.
The device criteria under the MMD program was described as a  requirement to use "modern devices," according to Karagounis'  description, although exactly what that entails wasn't elucidated. 
While organizations typically get the Microsoft Intune mobile  device management service with Enterprise Mobility + Security licensing, the  point of Microsoft's MMD announcement appears to be that Microsoft will perform  the device provisioning, management and updating. Microsoft currently has a separate Windows  AutoPilot service that's designed to let end users take care of the new  device provisioning process, although it wasn't mentioned by Karagounis as  being bundled with the MMD program.
Wes Miller, an analyst with independent consultancy Directions  on Microsoft, also found Microsoft's MMD announcement to be a bit vague. However,  he thought that Windows AutoPilot would be part of it since it's part of the Enterprise  Mobility + Security (EMS) suite. 
"To me, it seems like MMD is largely a client-side  layer over Microsoft 365 Enterprise suites  —  management of end-user devices  and the software on them, down to some level of financing and lifecycle  management," Miller indicated via e-mail. "So Intune and Autopilot  (itself basically a feature of the EMS suite in Microsoft 365 Enterprise) are  definitely core to this."
The MMD program is currently being used by "a small  number of customers in the U.K. and the U.S.," according to Karagounis.  Microsoft is planning to start the MMD program "in Canada, Australia, and  New Zealand in early 2019." It'll expand to other regions "in the  second half of 2019," he said.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.