Windows 10 Pro for Advanced PCs

Microsoft refers to Advanced PCs with “Workstation”, and the company seems to be focused on four key features which include the new ReFS file system that arrived alongside Windows Server 2012. ReFS is the successor of NTFS which was included in Windows the past few years. ReFS involves fault-tolerance and is improved in such a way as better handle large volumes of data and auto-correct. It is also backward compatible with NTFS. Microsoft will improve the functionality of the operating system to offer maximum performance and reliability in graphics and compute intensive use cases when the mode in enabled. The company is also increasing hardware support in Windows 10 Pro for Workstation, and with it users will be able to run Windows 10 Pro for Workstation on systems with a maximum 4 CPUs while also being able to add up to 16GB of memory. Microsoft is including SMBDirect protocol-based file sharing in Windows 10 Pro for Workstation, which will allow higher throughput, lower latency, and lower CPU usage when accessing network shares.

Potential issues

Some users who do Computational Fluid Dynamics on Windows 10 systems have complained about the OS and its update policy because CFD calculations may sometimes take up to several weeks for completion and the experience of returning to the workstation to find that Windows 10 crashed the job because it updated the OS isn’t very appealing. These kinds of experiences cam push these users towards Linux, so Microsoft must definitely fix this issue. Microsoft will most likely bring more features for this high-end area of the market after discussions and more feedback is provided by its advanced users. RELATED STORIES TO CHECK OUT:

Windows 10 build 16212 breaks PCs and phones, roll back now Windows 10 Pro for advanced PCs arrives this fall Windows 10 builds 16212 and 15063 attempt to install on non-Insider PCs

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