Hyperscale Silicon
The latest Hyperscale Silicon coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
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.
Microsoft 365 Apps on Windows Server 2022 Gets a Feature Freeze Date: What Admins Must Do Now
Microsoft has confirmed that Microsoft 365 Apps on Windows Server 2022 will stop receiving feature updates after Version 2608 and will get only security patches until October 10, 2028. Full support ends on October 13, 2026, when Server 2022 exits Mainstream Support. IT admins must inventory their environments and plan a migration to Windows Server 2025, Azure Virtual Desktop, or Windows 365 before the 2028 deadline, with a controlled hold at Version 2608 serving as a temporary bridge.
Microsoft Sets Azure FXT Edge Filer End-of-Life for 2026: Don’t Rush to Replace It
Microsoft will end support for Azure FXT Edge Filer on September 30, 2026. IT teams should resist the urge to select a replacement immediately and instead invest time in mapping every dependency—DNS entries, NFS mounts, indirect SMB paths, backup jobs, and automation—to avoid breaking critical workflows during migration. A step-by-step discovery plan, starting with Azure tools and expanding to client-side evidence, forms the foundation a safe cutover.
Microsoft Retires Azure VPN Client for Linux in 2026, Leaving Entra ID Users Without a Direct Replacement
Microsoft is retiring the preview Azure VPN Client for Linux on August 31, 2026. Because the recommended open-source replacements (OpenVPN and strongSwan) don't support Entra ID authentication, organizations that rely on that sign-in method for Linux point-to-site connections must redesign their access architecture. The article details the impact, why it's happening, and a practical migration roadmap to ensure a smooth transition before the deadline.
Azure Migrate Classic’s Last Recovery Points Are Already a Month Old – Here’s How to Migrate Before the September 2026 Deadline
Azure Migrate Classic stops working on September 30, 2026, but its last recovery points were frozen on May 31, 2026, making every existing replica weeks out of date. Administrators must immediately sort physical-server workloads into two tracks: cut over from a frozen Classic recovery point only if it’s validated as production-ready, or re-replicate using the simplified Azure Migrate appliance. This analysis provides a decision framework, step-by-step audit plan, and deadline-driven actions to avoid losing access to the migration portal.
The End of Free Ping Tests: How to Prepare for Application Insights' September 2026 Shift
Microsoft will retire Application Insights URL ping tests on September 30, 2026, forcing a migration to paid Standard web tests. This analysis explains what the change means for Azure administrators, how to audit existing monitoring, estimate new costs, and execute a migration without losing critical visibility.
Microsoft 365’s Semi-Annual Channel Is Now Monthly: How to Prepare Your Organization Before September 8
Microsoft has released version 2606 of Microsoft 365 Apps, merging the Semi-Annual Enterprise Channel with the Monthly Enterprise Channel. This article explains the practical impact—no architecture change, a hard support deadline of September 8, 2026, and what IT admins must do to prepare their add-ins, reporting, and update pipelines for the new monthly feature cadence.
Windows 11 Cloud Rebuild Preview: A Media-Free Recovery That Requires a Strict Pre-Flight Test
Microsoft has introduced an Insider Experimental preview of Cloud Rebuild for Windows 11, a WinRE-based recovery feature that downloads a fresh OS from Windows Update without needing USB installation media. While it promises a simpler reset for home users and streamlined provisioning for IT, early documentation and community testing reveal strict prerequisites around networking, TPM, and driver availability. We break down how it works, who should use it, and the crucial pre-flight checks that can make or break the recovery process.
Azure AI Document Intelligence Containers Get a Shorter Deadline: What You Must Do Before August 2026
Microsoft will retire the Azure AI Document Intelligence v2.1 container on August 31, 2026, a full year before the equivalent cloud API. Organizations must inventory deployments now and map container workloads to available v4.0 and v3.1 models to avoid disruption.