tezza Posted April 17, 2012 Share Posted April 17, 2012 Summary: It’s a big week on the Windows branding front, with Microsoft officially releasing the final names for Windows 8 client and Windows 8 Server. It’s the week for Microsoft to make official the names of the products that have born the codename “Windows 8.” On April 16, Microsoft officials unsurprisingly revealed that the final name of Windows 8 on most PCs and tablets would be “Windows 8.” The name of Windows 8 on ARM tablets, surprisingly, is Windows RT — not to be confused (ha!) with the WinRT Windows Runtime which is the crux of the Windows 8 Metro-Style development platform. On April 17, Microsoft officials said during the opening keynote of the Microsoft Management Summit (MMS) 2012 in Las Vegas that the final name of Windows Server 8 will be “Windows Server 2012.” The server name is an unsurprising choice, as well. Microsoft typically uses date-centric names for its Windows Server product family. And even though the Softies have not yet said when Windows 8 client or Windows Server 2012 will be released to manufacturing and made generally available, it’s been considered a given for a while now that this would happen before the end of calendar year 2012. (Inside baseball alert: Some Microsoft watchers have said they think there is a hard and fast rule that any product that Microsoft releases after the end of its current fiscal year — June 30 — automatically gets the following year attached to its name. I’ve heard this supposed rule isn’t a rule at all, and that Microsoft product naming is more haphazard than some of my colleagues tend to believe. Windows Server 2012 may be released to manufacturing before June 30, and it may not. In either case, it’s not going to be dubbed Windows Server 2013.) Windows Server 2012 is currently available in beta form. A near-final release candidate of both the server and the Windows 8 client are expected some time this summer (possibly late May/early June, according to idle gossip). Microsoft officials have not provided a RC target date, nor an RTM date for either version of the product. At MMS 2012, Microsoft officials also announced that System Center 2012 is now generally available. System Center 2012 is the family of eight different Microsoft systems-management products that Microsoft is now bundling together as a suite. Microsoft released System Center 2012 to manufacturing around late March/early April and already made the final bits available to volume customers and TechNet/MSDN subscribers. System Center 2012 is available as either a Standard or DataCenter bundle. Microsoft is positioning System Center 2012 as a cornerstone of both its private and public cloud offerings. Redmond officials are pitching System Center 2012 as appealing to both the “server administrator and the cloud innovator.” Microsoft also released for download this week Microsoft Deployment Toolkit (MDT) 2012, the newest version of Microsoft Deployment Toolkit, which supports the deployment of Windows 7, Office 2010 and 365, and Windows Server 2008 R2 in addition to deployment of Windows Vista, Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2003, and Windows XP. http://www.zdnet.com/blog/microsoft/windows-server-8-officially-dubbed-windows-server-2012/12475 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
visualbuffs Posted April 17, 2012 Share Posted April 17, 2012 Microsoft has now announced the official product name for the next version of its Windows Server software series. In a press release, the company said the product, which has been previously referred to by its code name Windows Server 8, will now be titled Windows Server 2012. It's expected to be officially released sometime later this year, most likely in the same time frame as the release of Windows 8. Microsoft released a beta of Windows Server 2012, under the Windows Server 8 name, in late February. The company has already said that Windows Server 2012 will offer "businesses and hosting providers a scalable, dynamic, and multitenant-aware cloud infrastructure that securely connects across premises and allows IT to respond to business needs faster and more efficiently." The company also recently announced that Windows Server 2012 would have an all new online backup service for its users. It will use the already established Windows Azure cloud-based platform as its basis along with the downloadable Microsoft Online Backup Agent in order for server administrators to transfer files to the backup service. Beta users can try out the backup service, with 10 GB of free storage, when they download and install the current beta version. Source Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrator DKT27 Posted April 17, 2012 Administrator Share Posted April 17, 2012 Threads merged. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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