Cloud Runtime Protection
The latest Cloud Runtime Protection coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
Azure Functions In-Process Model Ends in 2026: Here's Your Practical Migration Plan
Microsoft’s in-process Azure Functions model reaches end of support on November 10, 2026, forcing a migration to the isolated worker model. .NET 10 isolated worker provides the longest support runway through 2028, while .NET 8 and 9 both fall off on the deadline day. A practical, step-by-step plan helps development teams inventory apps, choose the right target framework, migrate Durable Functions code, and deploy safely with slot swaps.
Azure Virtual Desktop Classic Retires Sept 2026: How to Migrate Without Disruption
Microsoft will retire Azure Virtual Desktop classic on September 30, 2026, forcing organizations to migrate, rebuild, or retire all classic host pools. A scorecard-based approach helps IT admins decide whether to use automated migration, a parallel rebuild, or deeper investigation for each pool, while avoiding brittle undocmented dependencies. Starting early and testing rollback plans are critical to prevent user disruption.
Microsoft Graph’s Browser Push Preview Simplifies Alerts for M365 and Windows Admins
Microsoft Graph’s beta now supports browser push notifications, letting web-based admin tools receive change alerts without a public webhook. It’s a preview-only simplification for interactive consoles, but production automation still demands webhooks or Azure Event Hubs.
Microsoft Clarifies Azure Monitor API Retirement: No Hard Stop on Sept. 14, 2026, But Don’t Wait to Migrate
Microsoft has clarified that the HTTP Data Collector API retirement on September 14, 2026, is not a hard ingestion stop for TLS 1.2+ clients, but official support and SLA coverage will end. Administrators must still inventory and migrate all custom senders to the Logs Ingestion API to avoid operating on an unsupported endpoint, with priority on security and critical workloads.
Azure Service Bus: Old Protocol, Old SDKs Both Retire by September 2026
Microsoft retires the legacy SBMP protocol and older Azure Service Bus .NET SDKs on September 30, 2026, creating two distinct risks for Windows workloads. This article explains the differences, guides an inventory-first approach, and provides practical steps to migrate protocols and modernize SDKs before the deadline.
Your Azure Computer Vision APIs Will Fail on September 13, 2026 — Here’s the Fix
Microsoft is retiring Azure Computer Vision API versions 1.0 through 3.1 on September 13, 2026. After that date, calls to these endpoints will fail completely. Affected teams must audit their code, choose between the GA 3.2 API or the newer Image Analysis 4.0 GA, and test thoroughly to ensure a smooth migration before the hard cutoff.
New Outlook Arrives in GCC High and DoD: What Government IT Needs to Know Before September 30
Microsoft is bringing the new Outlook for Windows to GCC High and DoD clouds, with a public preview starting July 30, 2026, and general availability from September 30. The client won't replace classic Outlook automatically, giving IT teams time to test add-in dependencies, compliance workflows, and the web-based architecture before any migration. Government administrators should use the preview period to build a risk-based adoption plan and validate rollback procedures.
AWS CloudFront VPC Origins Global Outage Exposes Single-Ingress Risk: Canvas, Blackboard, Hugging Face Hit
A capacity limit in a single AWS Frankfurt availability zone triggered a global outage of CloudFront's VPC Origins feature on July 16, 2026, lasting over three hours and taking down Canvas, Blackboard, Hugging Face, and others. The incident exposes a single-point-of-failure risk in the feature's security design, which eliminates public origin exposure but also removes alternate ingress paths. This article breaks down the root cause, downstream impact, the growing pattern of cloud control-plane failures, and practical steps IT teams should take before the next outage.
Windows 11’s Win+V Isn’t Just Paste: How to Unlock Clipboard History, Sync, and PowerShell Hacks
Microsoft’s built-in clipboard manager—accessible via Win+V—offers more than simple copy-paste recovery. With persistent pinning, cloud sync across devices, and direct PowerShell integration, it’s a productivity workhorse hiding in plain sight. Here’s how to make the most of it without third-party tools.
Your AKS Windows Server 2019 Pools Are Already Unsupported: What to Do Before Scaling Fails
Windows Server 2019 node pools in Azure Kubernetes Service have been unsupported since March 1, 2026, and the remaining node images will be removed on April 1, 2027, causing scaling operations to fail. This article explains the practical impact for AKS administrators, the migration steps required, and the risks of not acting before the deadline.
Azure Anomaly Detector Is Retiring in 2026: Here’s How to Prepare
Microsoft will retire Azure Anomaly Detector on October 1, 2026, giving IT teams 18 months to migrate. This article outlines a practical discovery and migration plan to ensure no dependencies are missed before the deadline.
Azure Maps Forced Upgrade on Sept. 15, 2026, and the Render v1 Shutdown That Follows: A Survival Plan
Microsoft will automatically upgrade all remaining Azure Maps Gen1 accounts to Gen2 on September 15, 2026, just two days before the Render v1 API retires. While credentials stay valid, the pricing and capacity changes—and the hard Render v1 cutoff—demand separate, proactive workstreams. IT teams must inventory accounts, baseline transactions, update ARM templates, and audit all applications for deprecated API calls well before the deadlines to avoid cost surprises and service outages.
Microsoft warns: Move your Azure NVv4 VMs before September 30, 2026, or they’ll be deallocated
Microsoft will forcibly deallocate all Azure NVv4 virtual machines on September 30, 2026, ending support and SLA for affected VMs. Users must inventory their entire Azure estate, choose a replacement series like the NVads_V710_v5, confirm regional capacity and GPU quota, and test migrations carefully—especially given a known resize error that requires a feature flag. The runway is shortening, with Reserved Instance and Capacity Priority Program sales already closed.