September 2017
Intermediate to advanced
314 pages
8h 5m
English
In virtual desktop configurations (where many guest Windows installations reside on a virtualization stack and users connect to them via thin clients or RDP protocol apps), administrators are likely familiar with the variety of scripts used to tweak Windows 7 to make it a performant guest in a Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI). The scripts were designed to reduce the unnecessary IO load on the disk subsystem of the VDI host(s) as well as reduce CPU usage (except when needed of course). These scripts made significant changes to the operating system and were supported to varying degrees by vendors, OEMs, and Microsoft.
In Windows 10, people I think are finding that this method of modifying the system wholesale ...
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