Proxmox

What was Microsoft thinking?



We changed your server’s OS while you were sleeping. Now your apps are broken and you owe us money. Just a day in the life of a Windows Server admin, as Microsoft shoves out an in-place upgrade to Windows Server 2025 via Windows Update.

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Video timestamps:
0:00 – WTF Happened?
1:39 – This is Different
3:31 – Mistakes Will Happen
6:00 – This is Expensive
8:52 – What Should You Do?

#Microsoft #Windows #WindowsServer #WindowsServer2025

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15 Comments

  1. This is Microsoft dropping ADS for upgrades – despite their words otherwise – when they think they can get away with it, it will be repeated in another form. 😛

  2. wait, WHAT? You need CAL license for every DHCP lease from DHCP server? Whoa, I never thought about it like that, and Microsoft never told such thing. Now I think I have some problems with licensing in my company. You mean ane DHCP lease even to non-windows machines?

  3. My takes on this:

    – The fact that some RMMs were impacted others weren't (my org wasn't) strikes me as this was an issue in failures in communication/tagging both at MS and the RMM ISVs. Incompetence on both sides, and I think this is why I haven't seen a smoking gun yet. If this was abundantly clear where the issue is, I think we would have seen it. I haven't actively looked for it – but haven't passively seen it on the likes of /r/sysadmin

    – I don't agree with your take on admins accidentally clicking an upgrade button of that sort. It's very much "outside" the normal process and any mistakes of that kind are just human error of another sort. I see that as too minor a case to worry over.

    – 100% agree on the licensing, that's where 99.9% of the issue with Microsoft's idea here are. HOWEVER it should be mentioned that with new MS pay-as-you-go licensing …. I can see this being interesting for some admins when Server vNext rolls around.

    – If I'm not mistaken, regular CALs are included with E3/E5 licensing and with so many orgs on MS365, I don't think regular CALs are a huge issue. Remote Desktop CALs though? Oh boy. I'm sure there's lots of different CAL and licensing gotchas. I think you did a good job covering just the surface level and how impactful it can be.

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