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What’s new with Microsoft in open source and Kubernetes at Open Source Summit and KubeCon India

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When building with AI on Kubernetes, getting a model running is the starting line. The engineering shows up in the months after: serving traffic you didn’t forecast, rolling out model and platform changes without downtime, and holding costs down while the system keeps shifting underneath you.

That work raises the bar on infrastructure. Training and inference put real money on every idle accelerator, so utilization stops being a vanity metric. Estates grow from a handful of clusters to hundreds, so governance has to scale without a matching increase in headcount. And the cost of a bad upgrade rises, because a stalled training run or a reloaded inference server is far more painful to recover than restarting a stateless web service.

The updates we’re sharing this week at Open Source Summit and KubeCon + CloudNativeCon India target exactly that operational layer, across the open source foundation and Azure Kubernetes Service. Several of them build on work first shared at KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Europe 2026 and Open Source Summit North America 2026 earlier this year.

Building the open source foundation for agentic systems

Agents have to run somewhere, and most of them land on a Kubernetes cluster on top of a Linux host. The more autonomous they become, the more that foundation has to be predictable and secure by default. We made two announcements at Open Source Summit North America 2026, with broader rollout at Microsoft Build 2026, that are worth repeating:

  • Azure Container Linux is generally available (GA). It is a minimal, immutable, container-optimized operating system maintained by Microsoft, with a smaller package footprint that cuts patching overhead and limits drift as fleets grow.
  • Azure Linux 4.0 is in public preview on Azure Virtual Machines, giving teams a hardened base for cloud-native and AI workloads.

We have also continued working in the open on the building blocks an agent stack needs to stay portable across frameworks, clouds, and runtimes: the Microsoft Agent Framework (an open-source SDK and runtime for multi-agent systems), the Agent Governance Toolkit for identity, policy, and audit, and the Agentic AI Foundation, where Microsoft is a founding member. The pattern mirrors how Kubernetes got enterprise ready: the runtime came first, then the governance primitives that made it safe to operate. The full set is in the Open Source Summit North America 2026 recap.

What’s new in Azure Kubernetes Service

Alongside the open-source work, we continue to ship new capabilities in Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) across cluster lifecycle, multi-cluster operations, GPU efficiency, faster provisioning, and agent-assisted operations:

Run upgrades you can reverse

The cost of a bad upgrade compounds in production, and recovery has historically meant a manual reprovision under pressure. Agent pool rollback is now generally available: one command reverts both the Kubernetes version and the node image to their previous state, across all node pool types and OS SKUs, with no snapshots to manage. For drains that stall, max blocked nodes lets you set how many nodes can fail to drain before an upgrade stops, cordoning the stuck ones while the rest of the pool keeps moving, so drain failures are no longer all-or-nothing.

To stay ahead of support cutoffs, AKS now publishes end-of-support notifications to Azure Resource Graph with no per-cluster setup, giving you a fleet-wide view of exposure ready to wire into Azure Monitor alerts. And cluster extension auto-upgrades now honor maintenance windows, with an optional patch-only mode that applies security fixes without advancing minor versions.

Operate large fleets as one system

Most teams run many clusters, often across regions and clouds, and the differences tend to show up as operational inconsistency. Azure Kubernetes Fleet Manager closes several of those gaps this cycle. Managed Fleet Namespaces are now generally available: define a namespace once as an Azure Resource Manager resource, with optional quotas, network policies, and Microsoft Entra ID access, then place it across clusters as an immutable unit. A single fleet now supports up to 1,000 member clusters, up from 200, so teams that split clusters to work around the old limit can consolidate.

Fleet Manager for Arc-enabled clusters, announced in GA at Microsoft Build 2026, extends that control to any CNCF-compliant distribution running through Azure Arc, including workload placement across hybrid and multi-cloud estates. On the update path:

Get more out of your GPUs

GPU capacity is expensive and frequently underused, with accelerators sitting idle between requests and workloads spread thinly across nodes. Configurable scheduler profiles expose the upstream Kubernetes scheduling framework through an AKS-managed custom resource to pack pods more densely without running your own scheduler. GPU memory profiling, in public preview, adds function-level visibility into GPU memory through Prometheus and Grafana, to tune allocation and catch leaks before an out-of-memory crash. Several Build 2026 announcements reinforce this layer:

  • Managed system node pools in AKS Automatic take core system components off your workload nodes, reducing resource contention when capacity is constrained.
  • Anyscale on Azure brings managed Ray to AKS for distributed training and inference with fractional and heterogeneous GPU allocation.
  • AKS on bare metal, in preview, runs without a hypervisor for direct NVLink and RDMA access on the most demanding jobs.

Provision faster, and rebuild less

When pods wait on multi-gigabyte image pulls, scale out that should take seconds stretches into minutes. Artifact streaming means AKS streams only the layers needed for startup directly from Azure Container Registry, making pod startup concurrent rather than serial. In our testing, images under 10 GB dropped from minutes to seconds to start. Node auto-provisioning adds two preview capabilities, support for fixed-size node pools alongside autoscaling ones and custom OS configurations, and you can now apply a Capacity Reservation Group to an existing node pool in place rather than recreating it.

For Windows workloads, Windows Server 2025 is generally available: run it alongside Windows Server 2022 in the same cluster, migrate incrementally, and run existing 2022 containers on the newer host without image rebuilds, with native GPU acceleration for CUDA workloads in Windows containers.

Let agents take the first pass

When an AKS incident fires, operators often spend the first hour issuing discovery commands and correlating evidence before they can even form a hypothesis. Azure SRE Agent now covers AKS scenarios in preview: it gathers the evidence, attributes the failing layer (workload, cluster, network, or Azure dependency), and proposes a concrete next step, across the highest-volume incident families and the upgrade lifecycle. Writes are approval-gated and audited, and read-only diagnostics work on private clusters today through the az aks invoke bridge. The point is not to replace the operator, but to hand them one ranked finding instead of three hypotheses to chase.

The thread running through all of these announcements is open foundations, change you can make safely and observe, and operations that scale past the limits of any single expert, making the day-to-day of running AI on Kubernetes more predictable, more efficient, and safer to change.

Where to get started

Developer working from home wearing headphones.

Azure Kubernetes Service

Build and run AI predictably and efficiently on AKS

The post What’s new with Microsoft in open source and Kubernetes at Open Source Summit and KubeCon India appeared first on Microsoft Open Source Blog.

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How to turn off AI in your Google Docs

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Here's what you need to do to get those pesky "write with Gemini" pop-ups to go away.
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Microsoft still can’t make Windows 11’s New Outlook work offline because it refuses to go native

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Windows 11’s “new” Outlook is a hot mess, and nobody likes it, including many people who work at Microsoft. After all these years of trying to kill Outlook Classic, Microsoft is still struggling to make the new Outlook work properly without an internet connection. A new update promises better offline support, but it’s far from perfect.

As you may be aware, the new Outlook for Windows 11 is a web app that loads Outlook.com in a WebView2 container, which is basically the same as opening Outlook in an Edge tab.

In fact, if you open the Outlook app and watch Task Manager, you will notice that the so-called new Outlook calls all the processes that power the Edge browser, including Service Worker, WebGPU, and more.

In a nutshell, Outlook for Windows 11 is not an app, and you’re better off using a web browser instead.

Microsoft can’t make New Outlook work offline, but it’s slowly catching up

A web app can run offline, thanks to recent advancements, but a regular web app is usually not as advanced as an email client like Outlook. And unlike casual email clients, Outlook is an enterprise product, which means it has a lot of advanced features that need proper offline support.

outlook calendar offline event save error

In 2025, Microsoft rolled out the ability to save an email and browse the calendar offline in the new Outlook, and now it says it has added the ability to attach files while offline.

Microsoft told me it began testing offline attachment support in October 2025, but it wasn’t until April 2026 that the feature began rolling out widely. And now, I can confirm that Outlook’s offline attachment support is available for all accounts, including those with a personal Microsoft account.

On Windows, a WebView2 app like Outlook uses a User Data Folder (UDF) on the local disk to save browser cache and store everything offline. This means when you create an email in the new Outlook and attach a file, all while you’re disconnected from the internet, the file is stored locally and points to the LocalStorage databases.

When you connect to the internet, your emails, including attachments, are sent automatically. However, remember that Outlook will consume more disk space if you use its offline capabilities. In fact, New Outlook uses more space on disk compared to Outlook Classic or the original Mail & Calendar app for offline integration.

If you’re not able to attach files offline, make sure it’s turned on in the new Outlook under Settings > General > Offline > Include file attachments.

Include file attachments in New Outlook offline

This highlights one of the biggest challenges of its web-based approach. Months after promising better offline support, the company is only now rolling out the ability to attach files while offline, a feature that has long been available in the classic Outlook desktop app.

In addition to attachments, Microsoft will let you access more of your emails offline. Right now, Outlook syncs up to 180 days of emails to your local storage, but a new feature will let you save 1 year or 2 years of email on your device.

You’ll be able to configure this under the “Days of email to save” toggle in Settings > General > Offline, giving users greater flexibility based on their storage and offline needs.

Full-fledged offline support isn’t the only big change rolling out in the coming weeks. As Windows Latest previously reported, Microsoft is testing at least five major new features for Outlook, including a single view that lets you read emails from all accounts in one inbox and the ability to merge emails.

While I welcome all these improvements, I still find New Outlook for Windows unusable and prefer Outlook Classic. Outlook Classic is better in every way, and it can at least open my emails faster, compared to the new version, which takes more than ten seconds to do that.

The post Microsoft still can’t make Windows 11’s New Outlook work offline because it refuses to go native appeared first on Windows Latest

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A Big Shift in the AI Race

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From: AIDailyBrief
Duration: 22:48
Views: 1,483

Anthropic's forced shutdown of Mythos and Fable exposes jailbreak risks, cybersecurity weaknesses, and a chaotic regulatory response.
SpaceX's IPO and the Cursor acquisition signal a shift toward monetizing massive compute and competing across models, harnesses, and control planes. Industry themes include token-cost pressures driving efficiency, KPMG evidence that top AI users treat models as reasoning partners, and escalating national-security oversight.

The AI Daily Brief helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI.
Subscribe to the podcast version of The AI Daily Brief wherever you listen: https://pod.link/1680633614
Get it ad free at http://patreon.com/aidailybrief
Learn more about the show https://aidailybrief.ai/

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WW 988: Bubbleable - XBOX Could Be Facing a Moment of Reckoning

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With major leadership shakeups and rumors of studio closures, the future of XBOX inside Microsoft suddenly looks uncertain. Is this the beginning of a Game Pass overhaul, or could XBOX face an outright split from the company? Plus, PowerToys 0.100 (yes, point one hundred) arrives with so many improvements. And the Windows Insider program is leaving even seasoned users scratching their heads over Microsoft's so-called "simplification."

Windows

  • Windows Insider Program: Microsoft releases a record 7 builds to the allegedly simpler Insider Program
  • You can't tell the players without a program
  • Experimental: Less disruptive Windows Update, Windows Search improvements
  • Beta 26H1: Screen tint
  • Beta 25H2: Screen tint, quieter Widgets, Magnifier zoom controls
  • Release Preview 25H2: Screen tint, quieter Widgets, Magnifier zoom controls, Bluetooth connectivity improvements
  • All (?) get Voice access and Voice typing improvements, and new right-click Touchpad settings
  • Good God, Microsoft

Hardware

  • Microsoft announces Snapdragon X2-based Surface Laptop 8 and Surface Laptop 13 and the prices are eye-watering
  • Samsung announces Snapdragon X2-based Galaxy Book6 Edge and, yes, the prices are eye-watering
  • The component crisis is a disaster but limitations are driving innovation, as they always have
  • Google releases Android 17 alongside a new Pixel Drop, setting the stage for Googlebooks

Software

  • Microsoft Edge to follow Chrome to a two-week development schedule because we all love updating our web browsers
  • Mozilla releases Firefox 152 and a new roadmap for the browser

AI

  • FINALLY AN AI-FREE WEEK

XBOX and gaming

  • Fear & loathing at XBOX! The Microsoft fiscal year ends in two weeks, and big changes are coming
  • XBOX leadership set to reveal "hard truths" that will absolutely include layoffs and studio and game closures
  • Microsoft is looking at all options for XBOX, including a spin-off
  • XBOX Studios CEO and chief of staff announce their departures ahead of expected layoffs
  • XBOX reportedly closing Ninja Theory, makers of the Hellblade games
  • Compulsion Games is likely on the chopping block too
  • XBOX is coming to Gamescon this year
  • Xbox June Update arrives with new boot animation, more while Microsoft continues testing minor UX changes in the Insider Program
  • COD: Vanguard, EA Sports FC 26 and more coming to Game Pass in the second half of June
  • Rockstar Games is giving free GTA V upgrades to Xbox One and PS4 players

Tips and picks

  • Tip of the week: Don't doomscroll, learnscroll instead
  • App pick of the week: PowerToys 0.100
  • RunAs Radio this week: 47 Day Certificates with Todd Gardner
  • Brown liquor pick of the week: Thornæs Kagerup

Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell

Download or subscribe to Windows Weekly at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly

Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com

The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin.

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Cumulative Update #6 for SQL Server 2025 RTM

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The 6th cumulative update release for SQL Server 2025 RTM is now available for download at the Microsoft Downloads site. Please note that registration is no longer required to download Cumulative updates.
To learn more about the release or servicing model, please visit:

Starting with SQL Server 2017, we adopted a new modern servicing model. Please refer to our blog for more details on Modern Servicing Model for SQL Server

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