- BlackBerry Storm vs. the iPhone
- Digg's Kevin Rose: "We have to do better"
- Blogger warns: "Nortel doesn't make it out alive"
- Financial quagmire bringing out the scammers
- Verizon plays with the wrong e-mail addresses
Newsletters | Podcasts | Chats | Opinions | RSS Feeds | This Week In Print | IT Careers | Community | Reports | Downloads | Slideshows | New Data Center
Partner Sites:Application Performance Solutions | App Performance | Networking Solution | SafeGuard Enterprise Solution Center | SOA | Test your Web Filter | Value of WDS
On the heels of the completion of Vista and Office, Microsoft Tuesday opened its annual IT Forum conference by confirming the roadmap for the next beta of Longhorn Server, announcing the release of its long-awaited PowerShell command line tool, and unveiling a host of new and upcoming releases of platform and application management tools.
The announcements were made by Bob Muglia, senior vice president of the company’s server and tools business, during his keynote speech at the conference in Barcelona, Spain. He also emphasized the management infrastructure Microsoft has been building over the past three years under its Dynamic Systems Initiative banner.
Muglia said that Microsoft released for download its PowerShell command line interface and scripting environment, which is targeted at making it easier for IT administrators to manage their Windows environment from Exchange 2007 to Windows Server. PowerShell also works with System Center Operations Manager 2007, System Center Data Protection Manager V2, and System Center VirtualMachine.
Muglia also said that Beta 3 of Longhorn Server, which will be the final beta for the server, is still slated for release in the first half of 2007. Microsoft plans to distribute the beta to a wider number of users than the 500,000 beta testers of Beta 2, which shipped in May.
The final release of Longhorn is still on schedule for the end of 2007, according to Microsoft officials.
Still under review, however, is the new hypervisor virtualization technology, which is code-named Viridian, that has been touted as a feature of Longhorn.
“We are still working through the final details of how we will deliver this,” says Bob Visse, senior director of marketing for Windows Server. The official line remains that Viridian will be delivered 100 to 180 days after Longhorn ships.
“We would certainly love to do anything we could do to pull that in, but we have not made any announcements,” said Visse.
Microsoft’s recent partnership with Novell included a focus on co-developing virtualization technology but it is unclear if that would affect the delivery of Viridian.
Muglia also said that Microsoft would make available this week the “release candidate” of Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 2 through the Customer Preview Program. The final release of the SP2, which is mostly a collection of updates, is expected to ship before the end of March 2007.
Partner Content
CA Network & Voice Resource Center
Comprehensive Network & Voice Management Visit CA Network & Voice Management Resource Center and get insights into industry best practices, information that helps you to address your challenges.
CA Network & Voice Management Resource Center
Managing Voice Over IP for Successful Convergence
Voice over IP (VoIP) has much to offer in cost savings but some customers have concerns about VoIP call quality compared to the quality of traditional voice services. This white paper will help you learn how to take the right steps so that voice quality is assured.
Managing VoIP for Successful Convergence
The Changing Face of Network Management
Managing your network is serious business. This paper discusses the benefits of integrating configuration change-awareness into your network fault management solution
Download Whitepaper
Comment