Choose a Windows Deployment Strategy for Education

Applies To: Windows 8.1

For a Windows 8.1 deployment to PCs in education you can select a strategy based on your deployment size and infrastructure requirements, as well as tools you can use depending on the configuration, automation, and settings you require.

The choice of which deployment strategy to use depends on several factors, including the level of expertise and prior deployment experience available, whether tools like System Center Configuration Manager are already deployed, and the number of computers being targeted. As discussed, there are four primary deployment strategies:

  • High Touch with Retail Media

  • Lite Touch with Standard Image

  • Lite Touch, High Volume

  • Zero Touch, High Volume

Table 1 discusses each option.

Table 1. Windows Deployment Strategies

  High-Touch with Retail Media High-Touch with Standard Image Lite Touch, High Volume Zero Touch, High Volume

Deployment size

Less than 100 computers

100 to 200

200 to 500

500+

Location/ infrastructure

Off-campus remote locations, reference computers, or small computer labs

Off-campus remote locations or computer labs

On-campus locations with Windows Server machines available; can be used for media-based deployments, if needed

On-campus location with Windows Server machines and System Center Configuration Manager available; can be used for media-based deployments, if needed

Skills available

Generalist or student

IT pro or student with mentor

IT pro with deployment experience or advanced student with mentor

IT pro with deployment and System Center Configuration Manager experience

Application deployment

Manual installation

Manual installation

Automatic installation

Automatic installation

Primary tool used

Retail media

Windows ADK

MDT System Center Configuration Manager (optional)

MDT and System Center Configuration Manager

Infrastructure requirements

None

Low

Low to medium, depending on strategy

High

Because all but the smallest deployments use a custom Windows image, this guide examines the High Touch with Standard Image and both of the High Volume strategies in more depth. In most cases, you can accomplish deployment by using MDT for the best combination of simplicity and flexibility. However, for large-scale deployments, System Center Configuration Manager with MDT is the recommended tool.

If you have a student mentoring program available, you’ll be able to adapt the High Touch with Standard Image and the Lite-Touch, High-Volume deployments for the mentoring program. These methods require little deployment experience and offer an opportunity for learning in a hands-on environment.

Table 2 looks at the deployment tools and their respective strategies along with other considerations that will help you choose the right strategy and tool.

Table 2. Deployment Tools and Strategies

  LTI with MDT UDI with MDT and System Center Configuration Manager ZTI with MDT and System Center Configuration Manager

Automation

Allows for a customizable automation level, as needed

Allows for customizable automation

Fully automated

Process initiation

Manually or automatically

Manually

Manually or automatically

Media

Network or local media

Network

System Center Configuration Manager distribution or local media

Deployment process configuration

MDT

MDT with System Center Configuration Manager

System Center Configuration Manager

Configuration settings

Configuration settings predetermined

Some configuration settings predetermined

Configuration settings don’t need to be predetermined

Initial configuration

Low

Medium

High

Interaction

Some

Some

None

Permissions

IT pros need elevated permissions

No elevated permissions needed

Connectivity

Slow or none

High speed

High speed

Client requirements

None

The Configuration Manager client must manage the client computer

Network permissions

Clients can be behind a firewall

Requires Remote Procedure Call communication

Additional resources

See also