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Microsoft to unveil parts to grander management plan

System Center offerings to include capacity planning, back-up and recovery tools.

By John Fontana, Network World
April 18, 2005 12:11 AM ET
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Microsoft this week plans to introduce a limited beta of a tool for capacity planning. It will be one piece of a broad suite of tools designed to help companies model, deploy and manage network resources.

The news is scheduled to be announced at the company's annual Microsoft Management Summit in Las Vegas, where 2,600 attendees are expected.

The suite is a departure from Microsoft's 2-year-old plan to offer a product called System Center 2005, which was slated to ship this fall, that would integrate System Management Server (SMS) 2003, Microsoft Operations Manager (MOM) 2005, a reporting engine and a modeling tool for capacity planning, which is code-named Indy.

Users can expect a cache of individual tools under the brand name System Center that will perform tasks such as change and configuration management, asset management, application management, IT process orchestration, performance trending, reporting, backup/recovery and capacity planning. The original plan was to build it all into a single infrastructure.

"Microsoft insisted that it is important to develop a management brand that can compete with Tivoli and Unicenter," says Peter Pawlak, an analyst with independent research firm Directions on Microsoft. "You will eventually see that name [System Center] applied to SMS and MOM."

Microsoft officials declined to comment on the company's System Center plans.

The first pieces of System Center trickled out in March with the beta release of Reporting Manager 2005, a tool that collects data from SMS and MOM and lets users generate reports that combine information from the two, such as configuration and overall performance.

Last week, the second System Center-branded tool emerged when Microsoft introduced Data Protection Manager , a diskless back-up and recovery server that was previously called Data Protection Server.

And this week, Indy is expected to take on the System Center moniker when independent software vendors are given the first feature-complete beta code at the Management Summit. The Indy modeling technology was developed by Microsoft Research. It lets users model a server deployment based on characteristics such as the number of offices and users. A simulation of user workload can be run to determine system capacity, letting users experiment with different hardware and software configurations and user behavior before deploying anything on a live network.

Microsoft plans to demonstrate at the Management Summit how Indy can aid in deploying Exchange Server 2003.

System Center is one piece of Microsoft's 2-year-old strategy called the Dynamic Systems Initiative (DSI), a 10-year plan to build a comprehensive management platform for Windows.

DSI is designed to give corporate users a range of assessment, configuration, monitoring, management and development tools that will support Windows-based software and let it communicate its status to the network as a way to automate and improve the security, uptime and general maintenance of Microsoft infrastructure.

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