Highlights
For Amazon Workspaces Core desktop pools, the Desktop Details table ("Resources > Desktop Pools > poolname > Detailed") now has a column for the Workspace ID.
Both Dedicated Instances and Dedicated Hosts are now supported on the AWS EC2 Cloud, allowing you to use BYOL (Bring Your Own Licensing) for Microsoft operating systems. This is a selective feature; contact Workspot to enable it.
You now have the option of omitting the hyphen "-" when creating desktop pool and App Server Pool VM names. This saves a character in this limited (15-character) field. This is selected on a pool-by-pool basis. Using a hyphen remains the default.
Windows 11 persistent desktops on Azure can now be migrated non-destructively from one Windows 11 pool to another, provided that the disk resources on the target pool are greater than or equal to those of the source. This allows a desktop to be run on a new pool that provides different RAM and CPU resources and at least as much disk space. It has no effect on the OS. GPU to non-GPU migrations and vice versa are not supported. This feature uses the "Resources > Cloud Desktop Pools > poolname > desktopname > Upgrade" command. This feature was previously available only for Windows 10 desktops.
Application server pools are now supported on the Amazon AWS EC2 Cloud.
Control no longer attempts to hibernate VMs that are too large for hibernation (greater than 112 GB for Azure, 120 GB for GCP, and 32 GB for AWS EC2), and instead shows the checkbox to use Shutdown, if available, on the “Add/Edit Pool” page. See Power Management: Power Management: Start/Stop and Hibernation.
Known Issues
New Known Issue
In Time Limits Policies, you can't select a "Max. Session Length" for Named (Persistent) desktops. To limit the session length in Workspot pools that don't support desktop Sleep, Hibernate, or Shutdown, use the Windows GPO settings in “Computer Configuration > Policies > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > Remote Desktop Services > Remote Desktop Session Host > Session Time Limits.”