Yeah, Enterprise State Roaming is their new Azure-backed roaming capability. It requires a premium AD subscription, and currently only handles Universal Apps (so Desktop Bridge conversion required).
I’ve had a good experience with User Profile Disks – but sadly they’re only supported on server desktops or Windows 10 VDI. From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Markus Klocker Sent: 07 December 2016 11:25 To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [NTSysADM] Windows 10 1607 and UE-V We have Enterprise and it doesn't work properly :) If I'd speculate I'd say Microsoft pushes to Azure AD and Microsoft Accounts. And that is a privacy no go for many. Best, Markus Am 07.12.2016 um 11:39 schrieb James Rankin: Just idle speculation, but I’m wondering if Microsoft are trying to push people more down the Enterprise State Roaming route than that of UE-V? I have had a lot of problems testing UE-V myself on the 1607 release – in the end I gave up and just used User Profile Disks instead ☺ From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Markus Klocker Sent: 07 December 2016 10:08 To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> Subject: [NTSysADM] Windows 10 1607 and UE-V Hello, I wonder if some of you have already fought with UE-V and Windows 10 1607. With nearly bleeding fingers I then discovered this social technet post<https://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/4ea4904f-e705-4682-a8a8-91462422e737/windows-10-build-1607-uev-templates-dont-register-automatically?forum=mdopuev> So instead of working out of the box (as UE-V 2.1 SP1 did on Windows before) one has to manage templates central, distribute them via GPO and then run a script registering the templates so that UE-V works at all (this also includes Microsoft templates). Can anyone bring some light into this. All guides seem to address UE-V 2.1 SP1 deployments but not really Windows 10 1607 with the integrated UE-V service. Best, Markus

