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        Microsoft's AI Deems Windows 10 April 2018 Update 'Fully Available'
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- June 14, 2018
Based on its telemetry  findings, Microsoft now declares that the April 2018 release of Windows 10 (also known as version 1803 and previously code-named "Redstone 4") can advance to the "fully available" stage.
John Cable, director of program management for Windows Servicing  and Delivery, explained the "fully available" designation in Thursday's  announcement this way:
  Full  availability is the final phase of our rollout process. You don't have to do  anything to get the update; it will rollout automatically to you through  Windows Update.
"Fully available" is a relatively new term in Microsoft's ever-changing lexicon for its Windows-as-a-Service update model. It first  popped up with the Windows 10 "Creators Update" (version 1703)  last year. 
While some might think that the "fully available" declaration signifies  that Windows 10 version 1803 has reached the "semiannual channel"  (SAC) stage (which is the final rollout phase of Windows 10), Microsoft's Windows  10 release information table currently doesn't show such an SAC release. Only  the SAC-T ("semiannual channel targeted") is shown. It was released  on April 30. 
Microsoft's John Wilcox recently  argued that organizations had been waiting for SAC releases (formerly known  as "current branch for business" releases) to deploy Windows 10  updates, but it was unnecessary to do so if the SAC-T worked well after  testing. Organizations should go right ahead and deploy the SAC-T release in  such cases, he suggested. He also inscrutably suggested that Microsoft is planning  to drop the SAC-T term altogether.
Wilcox also had explained back then that Microsoft would  have a "broadly available" release declaration after an SAC-T release.  Possibly, "broadly available" has the same meaning as Cable's "fully  available" term.
For some users, the arrival of Windows 10 version 1803  resulted in Remote Desktop Protocol issues, bricked Intel SSD6 drives and black  screens when using Avast anti-virus. In contrast, Cable depicted the Windows 10  version 1803 SAC-T launch as a successful one. It elicited lower customer  support requests than past Windows 10 releases, and is now on almost "700  million monthly active devices" (see chart).
   [Click on image for larger view.] Windows 10 version 1803 correlated with a greater volume of use but lower customer support requests. (Source: June 14 Microsoft blog.)
 
   [Click on image for larger view.] Windows 10 version 1803 correlated with a greater volume of use but lower customer support requests. (Source: June 14 Microsoft blog.)
Cable attributed that success to Microsoft's artificial  intelligence (AI) approach, which checks to see if machines are ready for new  Windows 10 updates before they become available. He added that "the April  2018 Update is officially the fastest version of Windows 10 to reach 250  million devices, achieving that mark in less than half the time it took the  Fall Creators Update!"
Windows Insider Testing  Program
Microsoft has always urged IT pros to get involved with the Windows  Insider Program, where early releases of Windows 10 become available for  testing. It is supposed to give them an early opportunity to test how a Windows  10 update will affect their computing environments. 
This month, Bruno Nowak of Microsoft suggested in an  announcement that organizations should be using slow-ring Windows Insider  releases of Windows 10 for "validating both apps and infrastructure."  Microsoft's general argument is that it is giving organizations "smaller,  more manageable updates" with Windows 10, which is considered to be a  benefit, rather than a testing burden for IT pros.
Microsoft plans to answer questions about Windows Insider  previews and its testing approach recommendations for IT pros in a 24-hour  Windows 10 "Ask Microsoft Anything" online session on Tuesday,  June 26, starting at 10:00 a.m. PST. The engineering team will answer  questions live on June 27 from 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. PST.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.