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March 2007

What You Need to Know About 2007-2008 Microsoft Windows Server Technologies


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The next 2 years are going to bring a series of major and significant updates to all of Microsoft's Windows Server products, as well as an exciting series of new product releases aimed at ensuring that everyone's favorite software giant hits every conceivable portion of the server software market. However, even the most cynical Microsoft customers should be impressed with the sheer volume of server technologies the company is planning to introduce. So many technologies, in fact, that this article can serve only as a cursory overview, and one that I'll try to expand on in the coming months. In the meantime, here's what Microsoft has up its sleeve.

Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 2
With Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 2 (SP2), due out in the first quarter of 2007, there's much less deployment pain to fear than there was with SP1, which included major new features. Instead, SP2 is a more typical service pack that bundles all of the previously released hot fixes and patches (including SP1) into a single, easy-to-deploy update. It also includes a number of new features, and although some are quite interesting, none are major.

The most important thing you need to know about SP2 is that there'll only be one version of this service pack. Whether you're running any 32-bit or 64-bit version of Windows 2003, Windows Server 2003 Enterprise x64 Edition, Windows Server 2003 Release 2 (R2), or even Windows XP x64 Edition, a single SP2 version will update your entire system. You won't have a confusing slew of slightly different SP2 releases to worry about.

So what's new? SP2 includes Microsoft Management Console (MMC) 3.0, which was introduced in R2 but is now available to all Windows 2003 users. It also includes the Scalable Networking Pack and Windows Deployment Services (WDS) so that Windows 2003 users can deploy Vista clients. WDS can be used in three modes: Legacy (in which it works like a Microsoft Remote Installation Services—RIS—server), Mixed (in which you can use both RIS and WDS tools and technologies), and Native (WDS only).

Windows 2003 SP2 will initially be made available as an optional download, via Microsoft Update, for its first three months of availability. After that, it will be deployed via Automatic Updates as a critical update, although businesses will be able to block SP2 for one year. However, after that year elapses, SP2 will become a mandatory update.

Windows Home Server
A few years back, I first wrote about Windows Home Server (currently code-named "Q" but previously code-named "Quattro"), but this highly confidential project has been developed under a fog of secrecy that Microsoft has rarely been able to sustain. At the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in January 2007, however, the company finally announced its plans for a home server. In addition, while this product won't have any impact on the majority of businesses, it looks like a fascinating option for home-based and very small businesses.

Windows Home Server is unlike any other Windows Server product. It won't support Active Directory (AD) domains or any other kind of directory, although Microsoft did briefly investigate that possibility. Instead, Home Server will provide a few key pieces of functionality, the most intriguing of which is its storage technology. Windows Home Server will provide automatic backup for all of the PCs in a user's home, and by using a new patent-pending Single Instance Store (SIS) technology, it will achieve dramatic compression results. 17GB to 19GB of data, I'm told, can be compressed down to 300MB of backups. Microsoft will employ an image-based, full-PC backup with incremental backups thereafter, as well as document and data backups.

Storage on the server is handled in an obvious yet innovative way. Instead of using drive letters, Windows Home Server will aggregate all of your storage into a single storage pool, no matter how many drives you add. You can hot-add internal and external storage, whether Serial ATA (SATA) drives or USB devices, at least on the servers that will support this product (standalone Windows Home Server software will also be made available, so you will be able to install it on your own machines). What's interesting about this approach to storage is that users can specify certain data files—such as digital photos—as "important." Windows Home Server will ensure that it backs up at least two copies of "important" files, one each on two different physical drives, increasing the chance that one copy will survive in the event of a hardware failure.

Windows Home Server will also provide remote access over the Internet to any connected PC on the network running XP SP2 and later, including Vista, and to the server itself, providing the type of functionality one now associates with solutions like GoToMyPC and LogMeIn.

PC builders such as HP are coming out with innovative Windows Home Server hardware, although you can always build your own. Although pricing wasn't available at the time of this writing, Microsoft understands that this product must sell to the consumer market, so expect the company to be aggressive in this area.

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