Enterprise Browser
The latest Enterprise Browser coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
Forget ‘Big Brother’: Microsoft Teams’ New Wi-Fi Check-In is Actually About In-Office Coordination
Microsoft's new Teams Wi-Fi check-in feature, now in preview, automatically sets your work location to 'in the office' when you connect to a corporate network. Designed to help hybrid teams coordinate, it's not a home-tracking tool and gives users full control over opting in or out. IT admins should test it with Ask mode first and review privacy implications before wide rollout.
Microsoft's Windows Search Makeover Gives You a 'No Web' Toggle—Here's What It Changes
Microsoft is testing a revamped Windows Search in the Insider Experimental channel that labels results more clearly and finally adds a user-friendly toggle to disable web and Store suggestions. Home users gain a cleaner search, while IT admins need to test how the new control interacts with existing policies ahead of a wider rollout.
Microsoft Just Changed Where You Manage Roaming Settings – Here’s Your Action Plan
On July 1, 2026, Microsoft completed the migration of Enterprise State Roaming management from the Entra portal to policy-based controls (Intune, MDM, GPO). The settings themselves remain, but admins must now configure backup and restore separately to ensure smooth device refreshes. This article explains the change, its impact on IT teams and users, and provides a step-by-step action plan to avoid disruption.
Microsoft's Teams Management Migration: AA 830 Update Is Non-Negotiable for Android Devices
Microsoft is migrating Android-based Teams device management from the Teams Admin Center to the Teams Rooms Pro Management portal in a phased rollout ending September 2026. Admin Agent version AA 830 is a hard prerequisite for Android devices; organizations must inventory their fleet, verify the agent, test role-based access, and update documentation before the August 2026 redirects intensify.
Microsoft Sets August 2026 Deadline to Replace All Graph Toolkit Web Parts — Here’s How to Get Ready
Microsoft Graph Toolkit will be fully retired on August 28, 2026, with the deprecation period beginning September 1, 2025. Organizations must inventory all SharePoint Framework, Teams, and custom web parts that rely on the toolkit and choose to rebuild, freeze, or retire each one. High-risk components that handle identity, write data, or support critical workflows should be rebuilt immediately using Microsoft Graph SDKs and Fluent UI, while a strictly limited freeze may apply to low-risk, read-only parts. The article provides a detailed action plan, including inventory steps, rebuild guidance, testing checklists, and ownership advice.
Office LTSC 2021 Support Ends October 13, 2026—Your Migration Clock Is Now Measured in Months
Microsoft is ending all support for Office LTSC 2021—and consumer Office 2021—on October 13, 2026, cutting off security patches and technical support. Organizations and home users must migrate: most will move to Microsoft 365 Apps, while regulated or isolated devices may move to Office LTSC 2024. The remaining months must be spent on dependency discovery, workload classification, and rigorous pilot testing, not merely procurement.
Winget's Hidden Blindspot: Why 'winget list' Can Miss Installed Packages and What It Means for Your Automations
A silent failure in Windows Package Manager’s inventory command—winget list --id—can falsely report that critical software isn’t installed. While Microsoft tagged the issue as a documentation gap, WindowsForum’s enterprise testing reveals that unattended deployment scripts relying on this check may proceed with unnecessary reinstallations or skip vital validation, especially on Windows 10 LTSC and Windows Server. Admins should adopt a layered verification approach that pairs winget’s output with direct application health checks to avoid deployment meltdowns.
ODU Offers Early Windows 11 25H2 Upgrade, But Known WSUS and Dell Bugs Caution Against It
Old Dominion University gave users an optional early upgrade to Windows 11 25H2, two months before mandatory October rollout. The lightweight enablement package extends support to 2028, but known WSUS sync issues and a Dell driver bug may make waiting the smarter move.
Microsoft 365 File Formats Under Fire: How to Choose Between DOCX, ODF, and PDF/A
The Document Foundation's latest criticism of Microsoft's OOXML formats highlights real interoperability challenges that Windows users face daily. This article provides a practical, role-based guide to choosing between DOCX, ODF, and PDF/A, offering a tested strategy that focuses on document purpose rather than format ideology.
United Airlines Outage: Why a Broken Check-In System Paralyzed Hub Airports on a Busy Saturday
United Airlines suffered a major systems outage on July 18, 2026, that crippled check-in and boarding at several hubs. The disruption stranded passengers and exposed the fragility of airline IT infrastructure, even as recovery operations attempted to restore normalcy. This article breaks down what happened, why it matters for travelers and IT teams, and how to handle similar disruptions.
Microsoft 365’s Hidden Note Feature Is Gone—Admins Must Rethink Escalations Now
Microsoft retired the Add Note feature from the M365 admin center in July 2026, removing a crucial shared note-taking tool for support cases. Administrators must now rely on their service desk as the authoritative record, linking Microsoft case IDs to internal tickets and capturing every interaction. This article outlines immediate steps to adapt and avoid disruption in escalation workflows.
Power Platform 2026 Wave 2: How to Use Your Region’s Delay to Save Your Automations
Microsoft's Power Platform 2026 Wave 2 rolls out regionally starting September 18, 2026, but North American Dataverse environments have until October 16–19 to test and fix automations. This article explains the staggered schedule, who must act first, and how to validate Microsoft 365-connected flows before the mandatory update arrives.
Microsoft Sets July 2026 Deadline for Manifest 1.25 in New Teams Store Submissions
Microsoft will require all new Team Store submissions for channel-enabled apps to use manifest version 1.25 starting July 2026. The rule only applies to new marketplace listings and not existing apps or internal single-tenant deployments, but developers should still prepare their apps for private and shared channel support. The manifest change introduces supportsChannelFeatures, a declaration that demands thorough testing across different channel types.