On-Prem Windows Server: Are Its Days Numbered?

Microsoft has released yet another typically confusing update on the future of its family of Windows Server products <https://www.theregister.com/2021/07/28/windows_server_2022_sac/>. What’s clear from the details is that development is primarily going into the cloudy versions of Windows Server, with those who prefer to manage their own instances on their own hardware being increasingly left behind: At a high level, it seems that Microsoft is investing in Azure and [Azure Kubernetes Service], and that on-premises Windows Server users are in some respects being left behind. It is notable, for example, that Active Directory's functional level has not changed since Windows Server 2016, and this remains the case in Server 2022. ... SMB over QUIC, which promises secure access to Windows file shares from anywhere, is another key feature which will be available only in Windows Server Azure Edition. The article notes that on-prem Windows Server being slowly moved to the back burner in this way “will not go down well with on-premises users, nor perhaps with rival clouds running Windows Server”. But then again, given that Microsoft’s own cloud offerings are predominantly Linux-based, I can’t see other cloud services doing any better with Windows.

On Thu, 29 Jul 2021 14:35:00 +1200, I wrote:
What’s clear from the details is that development is primarily going into the cloudy versions of Windows Server, with those who prefer to manage their own instances on their own hardware being increasingly left behind...
Further on this <https://www.theregister.com/2021/08/19/windows_server_2022/>: It appears that Microsoft is keen to drive even its on-premises customers to a subscription model. Responding to a customer complaint that Azure Stack HCI works out as more expensive than a perpetual licence for Windows Server Datacenter Edition (which allows unlimited Windows Server VMs), Christensen offered no comfort, saying <https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/windows-server-ama/virtualization-improvements-for-non-hci-installations/m-p/2409730/highlight/true#M443>: "Today unfortunately the model is not all the way there yet, you have the infra in a modern subscription offering and then licensing of the guests in a traditional perpetual license... we are looking at how to improve that to offer the guest licenses in a subscription model as well."

On Thu, 29 Jul 2021 14:35:00 +1200, I wrote:
What’s clear from the details is that development is primarily going into the cloudy versions of Windows Server, with those who prefer to manage their own instances on their own hardware being increasingly left behind ...
Another step on that road: standalone Hyper-V Server is also on its way out <https://www.theregister.com/2021/08/31/hyper_v_server_discontinued/>. This in spite of it being a free product, customers still preferred other alternatives. The Azure version continues in strength, of course.
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Lawrence D'Oliveiro