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Upcoming OS Changes Introduce Greater Flexibility and Innovation

August was a big month for XenApp and XenDesktop, as Citrix announced our second Long Term Service Release, XenApp and XenDesktop 7.15 LTSR. The 7.15 LTSR is a major milestone for XenApp and XenDesktop on-premises deployments and we think you feel the same way as we have watched the thousands of 7.15 LTSR product downloads in just over two months.

While the Servicing Options program that includes the XenApp and XenDesktop release strategy known as Current Releases (CRs) and Long Term Service Releases (LTSRs) has been around for a few years, there was one key new announcement that warrants this blog post. With 7.15 LTSR, we announced that you can now mix LTSR Virtual Delivery Agents (VDAs) in Current Release and Citrix Cloud deployments. A picture is worth a thousand words, so let’s start with the picture first:

All three options extend the power of the 7.15 LTSR to new deployment options, making it even easier to align business goals and technology goals. In addition, Citrix introduces this LTSR VDA deployment flexibility because at the same time Citrix also announced that future Current Releases, starting with any release in Q4 2017, would be deprecating support for legacy operating systems. The 7.15 LTSR product documentation outlined this upcoming change and Citrix product documentation continues to be the single point of reference for this type of information. However, I wanted to work with my colleagues to ensure that all of you were aware of these upcoming changes and also understood why Citrix was moving in this direction. Let’s start with a table summarizing what is changing, again refer to product documentation for complete details:

Let’s walk through some examples:

Now, the bigger question is probably ‘Why?’ Why is Citrix dropping support for these legacy OSs in future Current Releases? For starters, Microsoft ended mainstream support for Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 back in January 2015. More importantly, Microsoft no longer develops or introduce new features on these legacy OSs and Citrix is following the same approach by discontinuing development efforts on these legacy OSs and offering extended support through the 7.15 LTSR VDA.

Additionally, this decision has a lot to do with the evolution of the Windows display and graphics subsystem. Direct2D replaced GDI, Windows 8 introduced the Display Only Driver as part of WDDM 1.2, and Windows 10 v1607 introduced the new Indirect Display Driver (IDD), just to name some examples without turning this into a graphics blog. As a result, the Citrix HDX Graphics stack also evolved taking advantage of these new Windows capabilities, some of which do not exist in the legacy OSs.

In the words of Roberto Moreno, our HDX Graphics PM “With evolution, comes progress, but that also means we must leave some things behind if we want to get ahead. Maintaining legacy code in our current releases limits our ability to innovate, reduces our development agility, and comes at a high cost from a support and engineering perspective. By focusing Citrix engineering efforts on the modern Windows OSs, we can continue to make the industry’s best remote access experience even better, while continuing to support the legacy OSs with our LTSR program.”

By introducing mixed mode sites for Long Term Service Releases (LTSR), Current Releases (CR) and Citrix Cloud, Citrix is giving you the tools to virtualize your mission-critical business applications while delivering innovative new user experiences to help keep your users productive and your business’s technology high performing–giving your organization the competitive edge.

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