What is Windows 365 Cloud PC?

It is putting a windows machine on a server, and you will be able to access it from anywhere and from any device. As you have a remote computer somewhere else, but not in your home or company. But with Windows 365 Cloud PC, you can access it, and you can work on it remotely.

In this article, we cover

Advantages of Windows 365 Cloud PC

When it will be available

What will be the price points

Who will get benefits from Windows 365 Cloud PC program

What kind of connection do you need to have to access the Windows Cloud PC


More About Windows 365 Cloud PC

Powerful:
Users may stream all of their apps, tools, data, and settings from the cloud across any device with an instant-on boot to their Cloud PC. The whole PC experience is available in the cloud with Windows 365. The cloud also offers flexibility in processing power and storage, allowing IT to scale up or down depending on their requirements. Organizations can choose the Cloud PC that works best for them with per-user per-month pricing and a choice of Windows 10 or Windows 11 (after it is broadly released later in 2021).

Simple:
Users can log in and pick up where they left off across devices with a Cloud PC, which provides a familiar and straightforward Windows experience delivered via the cloud. Windows 365 also makes deployment, updates, and management easier for IT, and unlike other solutions, it doesn't require any virtualization knowledge. IT can simply acquire, deploy, and manage Cloud PCs for their enterprise with Windows 365 tailored for the endpoint, just as they can manage physical PCs with Microsoft Endpoint Manager. Small and midsize enterprises can buy Windows 365 directly or through a cloud service provider and set up Cloud PCs in their organization in a matter of minutes. Microsoft is also continuing to develop new products.

Secure:
By combining the power of the cloud with the concepts of Zero Trust, Windows 365 is built to be secure from the start. Not on the device but in the cloud, information is encrypted and saved. In addition, Windows 365 simplifies security and offers the appropriate security settings for the environment at hand, keeping you up to date and building on the strength of strong Microsoft security capabilities and baselines.


When will Windows 365 be available to consumers?

Windows 365 will be available on August 2, according to Microsoft.

That's a matter of business, of course. For example, consumers and tiny businesses — sole proprietorships — are expected to receive the service at some point. But it won't happen straight away.

Who is responsible for managing the virtual machines, installing monthly security updates, and dealing with feature upgrade requests?


What is the price of Windows 365?

Microsoft has yet to publish the price of Windows 365. However, Microsoft accidentally announced the price of one of the 'Business' plans during a session at its Inspire partner conference - $31 per user per month.

This package has two CPUs, 4GB of RAM, and 128GB of storage. However, it will not be the most affordable option. Small organizations will also have the option of purchasing a single PC with 2GB of RAM and 64GB of storage.

Enterprise plans include 4 or 8 PCs, 8/16/32 GB of RAM, and 128/256/512GB of storage. However, the exact cost of these plans remains unknown.

From Windows 365, which groups of people will gain the most?

That isn't obvious at the moment. However, at launch, Microsoft has announced that Windows 365 would be available only to businesses, ranging from small startups to large corporations. This could open the way for a consumer introduction in the future, but speculation at this point.


For Windows 365, what type of internet connection will we require?

Microsoft hasn't said anything about it.

It was purposely unclear in what it did say. However, in a video broadcast by Microsoft Wednesday, Scott Manchester, director of program management for Windows 365, said, "If you can stream a movie, you have enough bandwidth for a terrific experience." (Manchester highlighted the launch of Windows 365.)

The first thing we'd want to know is what resolution we're talking about. And how irritating will it be to watch your PC display the annoying buffering icon if your internet connection isn't fast enough?

Let's hope Microsoft clarifies everything before or during the launch on August 2.