Microsoft names new Windows server software
The next version of Microsoft Corp.'s Windows operating system for enterprise
servers dropped its code name Monday in exchange for a more marketable one. The
Redmond, Washington-based software maker said its server software code-named "Whistler"
would sell under the moniker Windows 2002.
The announcement was made here at technology research firm Gartner Group Inc.'s
annual Windows conference. Gartner analysts, including John Enck, research director
of server strategy, said they expected Microsoft to release the product at the
end of 2001, in line with the software maker's earlier predictions.
Gartner analyst Tom Bittman, who followed the announcement with a session on
Microsoft's future plans for all its core business segments from the Xbox gaming
console to Windows circa 2006, called Windows 2002 a "minor release."
Windows 2002, the software that Microsoft will offer to business customers
to run large servers and data centers, shared the same code name as Windows
XP, the operating system that Microsoft is developing for desktop computers.
Both were known as Whistler.
Much of the buzz at Gartner's conference focussed on what Windows 2002 will
mean for corporate customers, but the Stamford, Connecticut-based research group
predicted that by the end of 2002, more than 40 percent of the operating systems
running on the Windows NT kernel -- which is the same code base used in Windows
XP -- will be aimed at consumers.
Windows XP, which formally earned its name -- short for "experience"
-- in February, is also slated for a late-2001 release. Media reports Monday
that the company would be late on the release surfaced after a Giga Information
Group analyst was quoted as being skeptical about a 2001 release.
Bittman said later Monday that Gartner is sticking to its estimate of an end-of-the-year
release. "We don't think they're slipping," he said.
He said that while the packaged, retail version of Windows XP could face delays,
Microsoft is committed to shipping the software to manufacturers to be pre-installed
on PCs in time for the holiday shopping season.
"If it does slip into the first quarter 2002, that would be dramatically
bad," he said. "But it won't."
Microsoft will try to time the release of Windows 2002 with new servers running
Intel Corp.'s forthcoming 64-bit processor, Itanium.
"If Microsoft plays it smart they will be right there when Intel is ready
with its Itanium," Bittman said.
Gartner's annual Microsoft conference, this year titled "Windows and Beyond:
Riding the Microsoft Roller Coaster," kicked off Monday with presentations
about life beyond Microsoft Windows as it is currently known, including the
much-anticipated .Net initiative, which aims to provide a framework for delivering
services over the Internet to multiple devices.
Read more about operating systems in ITworld's Operating systems section
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