Windows 8.1:6.3.9600.17031.winblue_gdr.140221-1952

来自BetaWorld 百科
跳转到导航 跳转到搜索
Windows 8.1-6.3.9600.17031-Version.png
Windows 8.1 6.3.9600.17031.winblue_gdr.140221-1952
内核版本 6.3
架构 AMD64, x86
版本 China, China with Bing, Core, Core N, Core with Bing, Enterprise, Enterprise N, Pro, Pro for Education, Pro N, Pro with Media Center, Single Language, Single Language with Bing, Update Package
编译日期 2014/2/21
版本字串 6.3.9600.17031.winblue_gdr.140221-1952

Windows 8.1春季更新的正式版本,2014年4月8日通过Windows Update推送。

安装

该版本包含个msu文件,您可以按以下顺序安装,之后重新启动。

Update Package的安装顺序:

  • KB2919442
  • KB2919355
  • KB2932046
  • KB2937592
  • KB2938439
  • KB2949621

文档

Springboard Series Insider 邮件节选(Springboard Series Insider - April 2014 Edition)

NOTE FROM THE EDITOR

Ben Hunter

Welcome to April’s Insider. It is certainly a busy time here in Redmond. Last week, we announced the availability of Windows 8.1 Update and tomorrow, April 8th, marks the end of Microsoft product support for Windows XP.

Windows 8.1 Update provides a number of features designed to improve the Windows 8.1 experience for enterprise environments. Perhaps one of the most talked about is Enterprise Mode for Internet Explorer 11, which provides improved compatibility for legacy web-based applications, such as those designed for Internet Explorer 8. Check out this month’s Internet Explorer IT Corner for Fred Pullen’s witty insights on this and other improvements in the updated version of Internet Explorer 11. Windows 8.1 Update also offers enhancements to the user experience, particularly for mouse and keyboard users. For more details on these improvements, check out the Windows Tip of the Month. Also, as IT professionals, I’m sure your thoughts have already drifted to deployment so, in this month’s Tips and Tricks column, Michael "Mr. Deployment" Niehaus will lead you through the Windows 8.1 Update deployment process.

With less than 24 hours until Microsoft discontinues product support for Windows XP, I find myself reflecting on how far technology has evolved since the release of the Windows XP operating system in 2001. Back then I was running a "huge" 1.5 GHz Pentium 4-based tower machine that I built myself connected to a 21-inch CRT connected to a crazy fast 1MB cable modem. I was very proud of it; things have really changed. I also find myself thinking that, while many organizations have already completed or are in the process of completing their migrations from Windows XP to Windows 7 or Windows 8, there are some organizations (large and small) that haven’t completed the move. Whatever the blocker to your deployment, the Windows XP migration resources we provide on TechNet can likely provide assistance. From our free (and highly viewed) Microsoft Virtual Academy courses on Migrating from Windows XP to Windows 8.1 and Windows 8.1 Deployment to an interactive Windows XP to Windows 8 Migration Guide, our goal is to meet you wherever you are in your deployment process and help you cross that finish line.

As always, if you have any suggestions on content you’d like to see or resources you need, please reach out to us anytime at springboard@microsoft.com. In the meantime, enjoy this month’s edition of the Springboard Series Insider and be sure to try out Windows 8.1 Update!

Ben Hunter
Sr. Community and Product Manager, Microsoft Windows Commercial Division
Ben.Hunter@microsoft.com

WINDOWS TIP OF THE MONTH

How to Get the Most Out of Windows 8.1 Update
One of the key areas of refinement in Windows 8.1 Update is to the desktop experience. We know that many of the business users you support use Windows 8.1 in desktop mode with a keyboard and mouse to do their work. As a result, here is a quick list of the improvements in Windows 8.1 Update that can make you, and them, more effective when using the desktop. These refinements include:

•	Easier access to favorite apps and key controls – On select devices, you will now find Power and Search buttons at the upper-right corner next to your account picture, enabling faster shutdown and the ability to search the PC or device right from the Start screen.
•	Taskbar improvements – You can now pin both desktop apps and Windows Store apps to the taskbar, making it easy to open and switch between apps right from the desktop. When using a mouse, you can also see the taskbar on any screen by moving the mouse to the bottom edge of the screen.
•	Easier access to favorite apps and key controls – On select devices, you will now find Power and Search buttons at the upper-right corner next to your account picture, enabling faster shutdown and the ability to search the PC or device right from the Start screen.
•	Boot to desktop as default – For those users that prefer the desktop experience, select devices will now boot to desktop as the default setting.
•	Consistency between options on the Start screen and the desktop – On the Start screen, if you right-click on an app tile, you will get a context menu next to the app tile that shows what you can do with the tile, like unpin from Start, pin to the taskbar, change the tile size or even uninstall the app. Right-clicking on an app tile on the Start screen works just like right-clicking on something on the desktop.
•	Seamless browsing across devices – With Windows 8.1 Update, Internet Explorer 11 detects your Windows device and input type, and adapts the browsing experience (such as the number of tabs on screen, the size of the fonts, and the size of the menus) accordingly.

If you are responsible for readying your users to use Windows 8.1, and educating them about the changes that have been made, be sure to take advantage of all Windows 8.1 End User Readiness resources we available on the Windows TechCenter, which has been updated for Windows 8.1 Update and which also can be downloaded as a single kit for ease of use. For more details on Windows 8.1 Update and a sneak peek at future changes to Windows, watch the Build 2014 Keynote.

TIPS AND TRICKS

Moving to the Windows 8.1 Update
Michael Niehaus, Senior Product Marketing Manager, Windows Commercial, Microsoft Corporation

Last week we announced the availability of the Windows 8.1 Update. Initially, the update was only available as a download to MSDN Subscribers only, but starting tomorrow (April 8th), it will be broadly available. Windows 8.1 machines that receive updates automatically from Windows Update will install the Windows 8.1 Update automatically; however, since most companies don’t update their machines from Windows Update directly, let’s talk about some other deployment scenarios.

If you are using Windows Server Update Services (WSUS) to update your Windows 8.1 computers, you will first need to approve one dependency, a servicing stack update that is required before installing the Windows 8.1 Update itself. Once this update has been installed, simply approve the Windows 8.1 Update and that’s all there is to it. For those using Windows Intune or System Center Configuration Manager, which build on top of the WSUS functionality, you will also need to approve and/or deploy both the service stack update and the Windows 8.1 Update.

If you have Windows 8.1 images built with Microsoft Deployment Toolkit (MDT) 2013 or System Center Configuration Manager, you will likely want to build a new image starting from the updated Windows 8.1 Update ISOs that will be available on the Microsoft Volume Licensing Service Center on April 14th. This will be the easiest way to integrate the update into your infrastructure. If you prefer to manually inject the updates, you can download them from the Microsoft Download Center beginning April 8th and inject them into a mounted image using Deployment Image Servicing and Management (DISM), in the order specified. (There are six individual updates in the manual download as opposed to the two that you see through Windows Update or WSUS.)

With regard to deployment tools, the Windows 8.1 Update doesn’t require a new version of the Windows Assessment and Deployment Kit (Windows ADK), Configuration Manager, or MDT; your existing versions will work just fine. For more details, see Understanding the Windows ADK for Windows 8.1 Update and MDT 2013 and Understanding the Windows ADK for Windows 8.1 Update and Configuration Manager OSD.

Finally, because the Windows 8.1 Update is a cumulative update to Windows 8.1 containing all the updates we have released for Windows 8.1 to date, you don’t need to install any older updates. Windows 8.1 Update also becomes the new servicing baseline for Windows 8.1 so next month’s security updates, which will be released according to the normal "Update Tuesday" schedule on May 13th, will install on top of the Windows 8.1 Update.

For more details about deploying the Windows 8.1 Update, see Windows 8.1 Update: The IT Pro Perspective on the Springboard Series Blog.

Michael Niehaus is a Senior Product Marketing Manager at Microsoft, responsible for helping enterprise IT pros with Windows deployment, Windows RT, and Windows manageability needs. Prior to joining the Windows, Michael was a longtime program manager and developer for the Microsoft Deployment Toolkit, having joined Microsoft in 2004 after 14 years working in enterprise IT.