Forum Discussion

Matt Holzmann (ATS)'s avatar
Apr 09, 2020

US Government Community Cloud (GCC) Universal Print Availability?

Is Universal Print available for US Government Community Cloud (GCC)? If not, when can it be expected. I notice that everything is run in Azure Public (that's OK), but the description "...an M365 subscription-based service used to centralize print management through the UP portal", makes me wonder what, if any, dependencies are there on the M365 region. 

  • Matt Holzmann (ATS), thanks for this feedback regarding Universal Print's support of Azure National Cloud.  As you've noted, our current preview is in the Azure Public Cloud.  We are actively investigating the requirements and compliance policies for supporting Azure National Cloud.  We have a goal to support Azure National Cloud, but do not have a timeframe we can share at this moment.

     

    Regards,

    Jimmy

  • Matt Holzmann (ATS), thanks for this feedback regarding Universal Print's support of Azure National Cloud.  As you've noted, our current preview is in the Azure Public Cloud.  We are actively investigating the requirements and compliance policies for supporting Azure National Cloud.  We have a goal to support Azure National Cloud, but do not have a timeframe we can share at this moment.

     

    Regards,

    Jimmy

    • Garrett Brown's avatar
      Garrett Brown
      Copper Contributor

      Jimmy_Wu We're incredibly interested in Universal Print for GCC. Has there been any further discussion, or are there any GCC updates you can share?

      Thanks!

  • AdhamS's avatar
    AdhamS
    Copper Contributor
    Any updates on this? We're in the same boat but in GCC High. Is it even listed on any of the service roadmaps?
    • Jimmy_Wu's avatar
      Jimmy_Wu
      Icon for Microsoft rankMicrosoft
      Update: We are actively working on supporting Azure National Cloud environments. Unfortunately, we still don't have a timeframe to share at this moment as there are multiple components (client; cloud service; printers) that all need to line up in order for the end to end to work.

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