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TechEd: Microsoft reveals Server 2008 pricing

TechEd: Microsoft reveals Server 2008 pricing

Longhorn and virtualisation plans laid out

Microsoft has given further details of server and virtualisation products due out next year that will set the tone for how well the company will compete in the enterprise software market.

It announced pricing and licensing details for Windows Server 2008, its long-awaited server product due for release in February, and revealed that the commercial name for its virtualisation product will be Hyper-V, formerly known as Viridian. The announcements came on the first day of the Teched IT Forum, in Barcelona, its largest customer conference in Europe.


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On its Web site, Microsoft is billing the official launch of Windows Server 2008, which will take place in Los Angeles on 27 February, as "the most important enterprise launch in company history." That launch will also showcase Visual Studio 2008, the company's application development tools, and SQL Server 2008, its database.

Windows Server 2008, formerly known as Longhorn, has been delayed several times, but since September some customers have been testing the release candidate, the term for when software is in its final stage of refinement before release.

The company is vowing no more delays: Microsoft is "absolutely on schedule" for the launch of Windows Server 2008 in February, said Andrew Lees, corporate vice president for server tools and marketing, on Friday.

Microsoft will release five versions of Windows Server in February, Lees said: Standard, Enterprise, Datacenter, Web Server and a version for Itanium-based systems.

Within six months of the Windows Server 2008 launch, it will also release Standard, Enterprise and Datacenter versions incorporating its Hyper-V virtualisation software.

Virtualisation enables one physical server to host several operating systems, which can be assigned to run certain applications. It means one physical server can be worked harder, often reducing the need for more server hardware, which in turn bring benefits such as lower power bills for datacentres.

It's complicated technology, however, both for management and security, and only about 5 percent or less enterprises are now actively using virtualisation . However, the market for virtualisation products is expected to grow rapidly over the next few years, according to market analyst IDC.

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