Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) is Microsoft’s implementation of the Web-Based Enterprise Management (WBEM) and Common Information Model (CIM) standards from the Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF) which is a set of specifications from Microsoft for consolidating the management of devices and applications in a network from Windows computing systems.
WMI allows scripting languages (such as VBScript or Windows PowerShell) to manage Microsoft Windows personal computers and servers, both locally and remotely. WMI comes preinstalled in Windows 2000 and in newer Microsoft OSes. WMI also supports such actions as the configuration of security settings, setting and changing system properties, setting and changing permissions for authorized users and user groups, assigning and changing drive labels, scheduling processes to run at specific times, backing up the object repository, and enabling or disabling error logging.
WMI Group Policy filter Win32_OperatingSystem BuildNumber not working
You experience this issue based on the following scenario; You want Group Policy to apply to Windows 8.1 and later versions of Windows. You want to use Win32_OperatingSystem BuildNumber to do this. And you create the following Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) filter: Based on known build numbers of Windows versions as shown in the table below: In this scenario, although you would expect the WMI filter to cause the Group Policy setting to apply to build number 9200 and later builds, Windows 10 builds are excluded. According to Microsoft, this issue occurs because the data type for BuildNumber is String and not Integer. Therefore, 10*** < 9600. To resolve this issue, use a filter that resembles the following example: Note: There are several ways to force the string to compare to return the result that you want. You can use any method that you prefer. The example is fully functional. Hope this helps!