News
        
        Microsoft Desktop Analytics Has One Year Left
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- November 08, 2021
Microsoft will phase out its Desktop Analytics solution on Nov. 30, 2022, when it will incorporate the product's capabilities  into  the Microsoft Endpoint  Manager Admin Center portal.
Desktop Analytics is used to assess  the compatibility of Windows endpoints. Some of its capabilities associated with Windows 11 readiness assessments have already been  moved into the Endpoint Analytics solution, which gets accessed through the Microsoft  Endpoint Manager solution. 
Endpoint Analytics is  actually part of the Microsoft Productivity Score service, which is typically  used to assess Microsoft 365 services in an organization. 
To use Endpoint Analytics,  organizations will need to have a license for the Microsoft Endpoint Manager product,  plus E3 or E5 Windows 10 Enterprise or Education licensing.
The Windows 11 readiness  capabilities moved into Endpoint Analytics are currently available for use if  organizations have Microsoft Intune-managed devices or "Configuration  Manager devices with tenant attach enabled,"  the announcement indicated. 
In "the coming months,"  the Reports node of the Microsoft Endpoint Manager Admin Center portal will  specifically show "device-level upgrade and update readiness insights"  for Windows devices. Incompatibilities will get flagged in Reports, the  announcement explained:
  These reports will tell you if any of your  Windows devices have application or driver compatibility risks or Safeguard  holds that will prevent an upgrade from Windows 10 to Windows 11 -- or a  feature update from one version of Windows to another.
A Safeguard Hold happens when  Microsoft sets a block for an update or an upgrade to a particular machine. It  happens when Microsoft's "telemetry" data collection process detects  possible problems or compatibility issues. 
Reason for Ending Desktop Analytics 
Microsoft indicated that it is  killing off Desktop Analytics because it had a "steep learning curve"  and entailed managing another workload. It's also being done to simplify the  use of Configuration Manager. 
To prep for the switch to  Endpoint Analytics, organizations using Configuration Manager should be on a  supported Windows 10 version and should "integrate your site with your Azure Active Directory (Azure AD)  tenant," the announcement indicated.
Microsoft first previewed  Desktop Analytics more  than two years ago, when it was billed as the  successor to Windows Analytics, part of the Operations Management Suite  product. Windows Analytics had  capabilities such as Upgrade Readiness, Update Compliance and Device Health for  assessing client devices, all of which got folded into the Desktop  Analytics service. 
Back  then, Microsoft had kept available some of  the Windows 10 upgrade-readiness capabilities of Windows Analytics, which were  offered at no charge. 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.