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July 07, 2005

Microsoft Tackles Medium Businesses

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Although Microsoft is known for its enterprise-class software solutions and for Small Business Server (SBS) 2003, which targets small businesses, the company had curiously ignored the crucial midsized business market until this week. This morning, on the eve of its Worldwide Partner Conference 2005 in Minneapolis, Microsoft addressed that gap with a server product bundle that targets midsized businesses.

Dubbed the Windows Server System for Medium Business, the new product bundle includes three copies of Windows Server 2003 Standard Edition, one copy of Microsoft Exchange Server 2003, one copy of Microsoft Operations Manager (MOM) 2005 Workgroup Edition (which is limited to 10 servers), and 50 CALs for both Windows 2003 and Exchange 2003. The package will cost about $6400 in the United States, a 20 percent savings over the price of the software purchased separately. Additionally, customers will be able to purchase as many as 250 combined CALs for Windows 2003 and Exchange 2003 for $76 each (US pricing), also a 20 percent discount.

"Today, medium-sized customers are content but enduring lots of pain with server patching and rebooting, and downtime," Steven Van Roekel, director of Mid Market Solutions with Window Server, told me earlier this week. "The bottom line is that these customers are not expecting enough from IT, and IT is not viewed as moving from a cost center to a company asset. They should expect more from their systems."

In addition to the product bundle, Microsoft will soon make available a complete set of documentation via a new TechNet Web site aimed specifically at IT staff at midsized companies. Microsoft has also published a book, "Windows Server System Deployment Guide for Midsized Businesses," to help midsized businesses make the transition to more modern technology.

End of Article



Reader Comments
Yawn...

Anonymous User July 07, 2005 (Article Rating: )


For those of you MICRO$UCK FANATICS saying windows wont be bogged down with more spy/ad-ware if M$ buys Claria, formerly Gator, read this, HAHAHAH:

eweek.com/article2/0,1895,1834607,00.asp

"Microsoft Downgrades Claria Adware Detections

Microsoft's Windows AntiSpyware application is no longer flagging adware products from Claria Corp. as a threat to PC users.

Less than a week after published reports of acquisition talks between Microsoft Corp. and the Redwood City, Calif.-based distributor of the controversial Gator ad-serving software, security researchers have discovered that Microsoft has quietly downgraded its Claria detections."

HAHAHAHA!!!! Would you like some salt to go along with your Crow?!



Anonymous User July 07, 2005 (Article Rating: )


So to address the needs of mid-sized business that are "enduring lots of pain with server patching and rebooting, and downtime", they want to sell you discounted software that requires more of the same...I don't get it. And why do they always seem to forget about SQL Server in the equation?

Anonymous User July 07, 2005 (Article Rating: )


Seems like a good deal when you count in what your are getting, 3 copies of Server 2003 Standard, Exchange 2k3 and MOM, they should have added SQL just to make it really attractive at no extra cost.

Anonymous User July 07, 2005 (Article Rating: )


"For those of you MICRO$UCK FANATICS " Your calling us fanatics? We actually have windows and come to this site for news on upcoming products. It seams to be ur the fanatacal one who owns a 3000$$ apple computer and going crazy with caps on a windows site.

Anonymous User July 07, 2005 (Article Rating: )


And the spin begins...

"Microsoft's Windows AntiSpyware application is no longer flagging adware products from Claria Corp. as a threat to PC users"

Yes they are. It's flagged as spyware, but the default option is "Ignore".

Why Microsoft is doing that is somewhat beyond me. Hopefully they'll change the default option back to what it was :P.

Anonymous User July 07, 2005 (Article Rating: )


The products aren't too much of a threat per-say. They're just really freaking annoying.

Why people don't update their Windows (well, the ones who should know better) regularly is beyond me. If you want to use Windows SP1 /w IE6 to browser the internet, feel free to do so. Just don't cry when someone exploits a hole through IE or something else and your system is bogged down with spyware.

If you can't upgrade to SP2, maybe you shouldn't be pirating Windows. Maybe you should have went out and bought it if you wanted it so bad (there's a thinker for the Apple guy... People want Windows...).

Anonymous User July 07, 2005 (Article Rating: )


Uh oh... Looks like MAC OS X isn't so perfect...
<http://secunia.com/product/96/?period=2005#statistics>

8% unpatched KNOWN vulnerabilities...

Let's see what KIND of exploits we have here (2004 statistics for 15 vulnerabilites):
System Access 22%, DoS 22%, Privledge Escalation 11%, Exposure Senstive Info 11%, Exposure System Info 7%, Manipulation of data 7%, Spoofing 2%, Cross Site Scripting 2%, Security Bypass 9%, Hijacking 2%, Unknown 2%

Windows is far from perfect, but your favorite OS isn't either :P. /me pulls out a knife and gives a salted (and roasted) crow leg to the apple zealot. /me hands him some cranberry sauce. Fin.

Anonymous User July 07, 2005 (Article Rating: )


Tropical windblows fanboy. lets see the MS numbers please. whats that i see. 50% system access for MS.

nice site btw.

Anonymous User July 07, 2005 (Article Rating: )


"8% unpatched KNOWN vulnerabilities..." Maybe. But AHA! NO KNOWN EXPLOITS!!!! HAHAHHA!!!

Micro$uck loses again!!!

While your busy clicking pop-up reminders to patch, re-patch and patch again, I'm working!!!

Read it and weep, 0, thats ZERO known exploits for OS X, compared to over 140,000 known Windows exploits.

You lose and your Crow is served!

Anonymous User July 07, 2005 (Article Rating: )


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