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Microsoft sends management products to beta

By Joris Evers, IDG News Service
March 16, 2004 02:28 PM ET
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Microsoft Tuesday announced test versions of several of its management products, including a new, lower-cost, "Express" version of its Microsoft Operations Manager (MOM) product.

The company said it released a beta version of Windows Update Services, the successor to the Software Update Services (SUS) 1.0 patch management product, as well as beta software for MOM 2005, MOM 2005 Express, System Center 2005, and a Device Management feature pack for Systems Management Server (SMS) 2003.

With the beta announcements at the kickoff of its third annual Microsoft Management Summit in Las Vegas, Microsoft also changed some terminology. The MOM update was previously called MOM 2004 and System Center, which bundles MOM 2005 and SMS 2003, did not have a year tacked onto its name.

Despite adding 2005 to the product names, Microsoft still plans to release System Center and the new MOM version in 2004. The SUS update is slipping slightly, Windows Update Services (WUS) won't be out until later this year. It was originally due in the first half of the year.

"This week we're putting Windows Update Services into a limited beta. We will have a broader beta this summer and put it out later this year," Bob Muglia, senior vice president of the Windows Server Division at Microsoft, said in a keynote.

New to its management product lineup, MOM 2005 Express is pitched as a less expensive product for organizations requiring only simple monitoring of Microsoft Windows Server environments.

The Device Management feature pack for SMS 2003 extends management capabilities of the product to Microsoft-based mobile devices such as PDAs and smart phones, Microsoft said. This SMS add-on and as well as an Operating System Deployment feature pack are due out in 2004, Microsoft said.

The management products are part of Microsoft's Dynamic Systems Initiative (DSI), a plan for reducing IT complexity by improving software manageability. Microsoft cited an Accenture study that shows IT professionals spend up to 70% of their time managing systems. The vendor aims to bring that down to 55% by automating routine management tasks.

"DSI is a long term vision, but it is also real and here today," Muglia said.

Besides the beta announcements and changes in the naming convention, which aligns product names with Microsoft's fiscal year, Muglia's presentation was low on news, said Peter Pawlak, a lead analyst at Directions on Microsoft in Kirkland, Wash., who is attending the Microsoft event.

"Very little new news has come out since I was here last year," he said. "If they have made any real progress with DSI, it must have just happened recently and it is too soon to even report on the progress."

Muglia did have some smaller announcements in his keynote. Siebel, for example, released a management pack for MOM. Other partners, including Veritas and Hitachi will also offer new add-ons for MOM, Microsoft said.

Additionally, because of the naming convention change, the forthcoming Virtual Server product is now called Virtual Server 2005. Microsoft last month released a private beta of the server-based application that allows multiple operating systems to run on the same processor at the same time and that is due out midyear.

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