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Amid the hubbub surrounding the impending beta of Windows Vista Service Pack 1 this week, Microsoft (Quote) also quietly disclosed it is delaying the release of Vista’s complement – Windows Server 2008 – until the first quarter of next year.
“This seems like the best place to let you know that Windows Server 2008, which we have been saying would release to manufacturing (RTM) by the end of the calendar year, is now slated to RTM in the first quarter of calendar year 2008,” read a post Wednesday morning on the Windows Server Division Weblog.
The reason? Microsoft will serve no server before its time.
“While we’re very happy with the feedback we’re getting and the overall quality of the latest product builds, we would rather spend a little more time to meet the high quality bar that our customers and partners deserve and expect,” the post continued.
In the meantime, the third beta of Windows Server 2008 is currently in the hands of 300,000 testers, the blog post said.
Not to worry, however, ventured one observer who tracks both Windows Server and Vista.
“A delay at that time of year is not significant [because] I don’t think many organizations were going to start any evaluations of it in that time frame,” Michael Cherry, lead analyst for Windows at researcher Directions on Microsoft, told Internetnews.com.
Additionally, planned rollouts of Windows Server 2008 should not be impeded by the schedule slip. “The number needed to be rolled out is substantially smaller for a server” than for a client OS, Cherry said.
The delay is not expected to have any impact on the gala that Microsoft plans to hold on February 27, 2008 to launch Windows Server 2008, SQL Server 2008, and Visual Studio 2008, since the company is holding the new servers’ coming out party independent of their actual availability dates.
Windows Server 2008, which was previously codenamed Longhorn Server, will provide many new capabilities that it has in common with Vista, including the Aero user interface. (Chairman Bill Gates announced the official name at Microsoft’s Windows Hardware Engineering Conference, referred to as WinHEC, in Los Angeles in mid-May.)
This article was first published on InternetNews.com. To read the full article, click here.
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