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Figure 11-9 shows the process of adding an app to the inventory in a private store.<br />

FIGURE 11-9 As a Windows Store for Business administrator, you can select apps from the public Store and make<br />

them available privately to members of your organization.<br />

Updates are delivered via normal update channels—Windows Update or Windows Server Update<br />

Services (WSUS).<br />

LOB apps can be distributed within an organization using mobile device management (MDM)<br />

software or deployment tools, such as System Center Configuration Manager or Microsoft Deployment<br />

Toolkit, without any connection to the Windows Store. This process, called sideloading, doesn’t require<br />

that the apps be signed by Microsoft, nor are Azure AD accounts necessary. The apps must, however,<br />

be signed with a certificate that is trusted by one of the trusted root authorities on the system.<br />

In this scenario, installation files are downloaded and deployed using the organization’s own<br />

infrastructure. Apps can be installed as part of a custom installation image or sideloaded individually<br />

using deployment tools or MDM software.<br />

This feature is still new and is evolving quickly. For a walkthrough of one scenario, see the article<br />

“Using the Windows Store for Business with MDT 2013,” at http://bit.ly/Windows-Store-for-Businesswith-MDT2013.<br />

146 CHAPTER 11 Universal apps and the new Windows Store

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