The Windows release health dashboard, which the company previewed at its Ignite conference, details known issues and blockers affecting Windows 10. Credit: AlphaSpirit / Getty Images Microsoft has begun rolling out its Windows release health dashboard to the Microsoft 365 admin portal, a move the company previewed earlier this month at its all-virtual Ignite conference. “This will be a phased rollout and we expect this information experience to be available to all applicable customers by the end of April,” Mabel Gomes, senior communications program manager in the Windows group, said in a March 25 post to a company blog. The original Windows release health launched almost two years ago as one of the changes Microsoft instituted after the disastrous debut of Windows 10 1809, the fall 2018 version of the operating system that had to be yanked from release because it deleted data. That dashboard — later labeled a “hub” — has offered information on current rollout status and known issues, both open and closed cases, for all Windows 10 updates. Notably, the hub was the one public location where Microsoft posted information about all Windows 10 blockers, issues that have prevented machines from upgrading to the next refresh (and thus marked the systems Microsoft would refuse to offer an update). The public release health hub can be found here. The Windows release health being added to the Microsoft 365 admin center will be similar but not identical to the existing hub; essentially, it will be “public hub-plus.” “Because the admin center is specifically designed for IT admins, you will find greater technical detail about known issues, earlier reminders about important milestones like end of service, and more resources to help you plan for and deploy Windows updates,” Gomes wrote about the release health add-in. “Our goal is to help you diagnose issues in your environment fast, provide steps to mitigate them quickly, and provide a root cause analysis for better support.” To access Windows release health in the admin portal, customers must be subscribers to Microsoft 365 Enterprise E3/A3/F3, Microsoft 365 Enterprise E5/A5, Windows 10 Enterprise E3/A3 or Windows 10 Enterprise E5/A5. Interestingly, Microsoft denied that release health “monitor[s] user environments or collect customer environment information,” to, for example, post blocker information specific to the OS version(s) being run by an organization. In the next breath, though, Microsoft acknowledged that “future iterations of [release health] may target content based on customer location, industry, or Windows version.” The latter would seem to be a selling point for release health in the admin center, since it would only display information that affected the firm’s own Windows 10 PCs. Most likely, if or when Microsoft does focus release health on the on-premises devices, it will use the telemetry collected by the operating system to do so, the same telemetry utilized by Desktop Analytics (née Windows Analytics). A more detailed explanation of what the admin center’s release health component offers can be found on Microsoft’s Docs site. Currently, only the cloud-based portal includes release health. Microsoft said that it’s working on integrating release health with the Microsoft 365 Admin mobile app — iOS and Android — “in a future release.” Related content news Apple updates its Platform Security Guide It's essential reading for IT admins, security researchers and anyone with an interest in Apple security, now updated for 2024. By Jonny Evans May 10, 2024 4 mins iOS Security Mac MacOS Security feature Q&A: Insurance exec says AI nearly perfect when processing tens of thousands of documents In the second phase of a genAI pilot program, Sedgwick found it could process documents up to 30 pages long and summarize them in minutes, allowing claims administrators to reduce resolution time. By Lucas Mearian May 10, 2024 11 mins Chatbots Financial Services Industry Generative AI tip An awesome Android audio upgrade Whether you're dealing with mumblings from meetings, noises from notifications, or music from commute-time streaming, you've never experienced sound on your phone like this. By JR Raphael May 10, 2024 9 mins Mobile Apps Android Mobile news Strict return-to-work policies may be driving tech workers away In-office mandates aren’t great for employee retention, according to a university study that gathered data from workers at Microsoft, Apple and SpaceX. By Jon Gold May 09, 2024 3 mins Remote Work Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe