Microsoft aligns Longhorn client and server work
A first Longhorn beta is still planned for early next year
May 5, 2004 12:00 PM ETIDG News Service -
Microsoft Corp. has synchronized development efforts for the client and server versions of Longhorn, the code name for the next Windows release, a Microsoft executive said yesterday.
"Today, the Longhorn client and the Longhorn server are tied together," Jim Allchin, vice president of Microsoft's platforms group, said in a keynote presentation at the company's annual Windows Hardware Engineering Conference (WinHEC) in Seattle.
The release of Longhorn is still a ways off. Microsoft executives have pointed to 2006 as the release year for the product, but Allchin in his presentation didn't give a target due date for either version of the software. Previously, after hedging about whether there would be a Longhorn server release at all, Microsoft said it would introduce the server sometime after the client release.
Allchin didn't clarify whether aligning development of the Longhorn client and server also means that the operating systems would be released simultaneously. Analysts from Directions on Microsoft Inc. attending the event said they still expect the server release to come after the client, since it will need additional testing.
A Microsoft spokeswoman later in the day confirmed the analysts' expectations. "Even with synchronized development cycles, a major release of the Windows server and client will almost always ship with some time-interval difference," the spokeswoman said. How much difference is still to be determined.
"The important thing to understand is that server development, as you come down the home stretch to release, takes a little more bake time than client products," she said.
A first Longhorn beta is still planned for early next year, Allchin said. He also gave an overview of client and server software releases from Microsoft before the company gets to Longhorn.
On the server side, Microsoft this year plans to ship Windows Server 2003 64-bit Edition for Extended Systems, Windows Server 2003 Service Pack (SP) 1, Windows Small Business Server 2003 SP1 and Virtual Server 2005. Next year's server road map includes a Windows Server 2003 Update, Windows Small Business Server 2003 Update and a new Windows Storage Server, which is code-named Storm, Allchin said.
On the client side, Microsoft is preparing to ship Windows XP SP 2 at midyear. Other releases this year include an updated Windows Media Player, Windows XP Tablet PC Edition 2005, Windows CE 5.0, Windows XP Media Center Edition with support for Media Center Extender, and Windows XP 64-Bit Edition for 64-Bit Extended Systems, Allchin said. Microsoft's hardware partners are also getting ready to ship Portable Windows Media Center devices.
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